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10 Reviews
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
clever & witty, yet stunning & soulful,
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This review is from: Big Lonesome (Paperback)
Ruland knows how to tell a story, that's obvious from the first few pages of this gripping collection of shorts. There's a cleverness in his conceits here, the way he reimagines cartoon and fairy tale characters into new and sometimes seemingly outlandish situations. But he's talented enough to never falter. Beneath the slick veneer there's a troubled, wildly beating heart. It's an often lonely, bruised or despondent heart, and it's that juxtaposition that makes this collection so riveting and striking and moves it well beyond clever pulp and thrusts it into literary originality. He doesn't shy away from unsavory characters -- sometimes they creep up on you, and sometimes they hit you full in the face -- but one of his greatest feats is how manages to twist and change our initial impressions. Whether it's through a re-imagined modern-day Dick Tracy, a pair of (nonexistent)lucky pants, or a hitman named Big Elbow Macaroni, Ruland keeps you turning the pages and keeps you tangled up in the characters. An excellent debut.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What Makes Us Human,
By
This review is from: Big Lonesome (Paperback)
There are no disappointments in this collection; each story offers something different while displaying a mastery of language and an empathetic understanding of what makes us human. Jim Ruland is a remarkable writer who has produced a debut collection that cannot be ignored. He's not afraid to challenge our assumptions, and in doing so we get to look at the world from a slightly off-kilter angle. [The full review first appeared in The Quarterly Conversation.]
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
witty and wild literary fiction,
By
This review is from: Big Lonesome (Paperback)
Jim Ruland arises from L.A. like a new John Fante for the post-McSweeney's generation. The diverse stories here are whip-smart, weird, and Imaginative with a capital I. One bad-ass debut collection, Big Lonesome will be beating up and taking the lunch money of lesser collections for years to come. Ruland's genre-twisting genius returns us to the days when reading short stories was fun---Remember? In a book full of innovative characters and circumstances, one highlight is the brilliant title story, a Pynchon-meets-Old-West tale like none you've read before, where even a robot Indian can find love and a mad scientist can try his hand at bounty hunting. I don't know about lonesome, but this collection is big fun.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A fine, original, and uniquely American collection,
By D.Fromm (Santa Monica, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Big Lonesome (Paperback)
I enjoyed Big Lonesome, Jim Ruland's debut collection of short stories, immensely. His writing is clean and spare and original; his stories funny and unsettling. Among the faves: Kessler Has No Lucky Pants, a bittersweet comic tale told in interview format; the touching Night Soul Man, one of several of Ruland's stories featuring the charged interplay between man and nature; and Brains for Bengo, the most disturbing story in the bunch. To me, Ruland's writing evokes a distinctly American landscape of love and death, good luck and bad, metal and muscle, the ugly, the wild, the old and the young. He takes contemporary fiction readers out of their comfort zones, but he does it in a generous, human, seemingly effortless way, and delivers on the rewards.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Damn, this is good!,
By
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This review is from: Big Lonesome (Paperback)
Jim Ruland is an incredible writer; his short fiction not only entertains, but provides a blueprint for how short stories really should be written. The problem is, I found it nearly impossible to dissect them and analyze them, because he trapped me; I couldn't step away to take the long view. Each of these 13 tales is compact, unique, surprising. For instance, The Previous Adventures of Popeye the Sailor is a droll take on a pop-culture icon; Red Cap also springs from literary pop--Little Red Riding Hood--but twists the heart and leaves a chill in the stomach. And A Terrible Thing in a Place Like This should be declared a classic for its elegance, visceral impact and masterful, harrowing blend of reality and dreaminess. Wonderful stuff; well worth reading.
Susan O'Neill, author: Don't Mean Nothing: Short stories of Viet Nam
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Second Best,
By
This review is from: Big Lonesome (Paperback)
After Sam Lipsyte's HomeLand, Big Lonesome is my second favorite paperback of 2005. Just when it seems language has lost its edge, Ruland comes along and fornicates the hell out of it. Most of these stories will rot your mind faster than a cloud of white phosphorous, and the rest sound great cranked to eleven. I mean it. Ruland's got esprit out the rear. He honors our founding fathers. He knows what to cut and what to kick. And he does not repeat himself, Madame, he does not.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good, quirky,
By
This review is from: Big Lonesome (Paperback)
Great collection. The stories and the characters populating them can be a bit raw and bleak at times, and can veer into the fantastic, but they are definitely enjoyable. Think more along the lines of Hunter Thompson rather than Alice Munro.
A number of passages in this book fascinated me: the similes/metaphors were startling, and the the imagery was nice and vivid. Every so often, the stories felt a bit scattershot, but overall I definitely enjoyed this book.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The human edge,
By Big Al (Boise, Idaho) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Big Lonesome (Paperback)
What I expected from this collection (featuring Popeyes's forearm on the cover) was a level of cleverness and outrageousness. I expected this book to be different that anything else I've ever read. And, on that front, this book delivered. I was constantly amused by Ruland's imagination. But what really blew me away was how touching I found these stories, that the lonesomeness, the desire for these oddities to find connection, the yearning to be beautiful, to be loved, or understood, or saved, was so potent and human. I didn't expect these stories to hit me so deeply, and for that, I thank Jim Ruland and highly recommend this collection.
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best collections I've read,
By KML (Chicago, IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Big Lonesome (Paperback)
One of the most impressive things about "Big Lonesome" is its range. Stories take the form of conventional narratives, diary entries, a questionnaire, historical fiction written in period vernacular -- each one is so different from the others in subject, tone, and form that it's hard to believe they were all written by the same person. What unites them is Ruland's clear, energetic prose and the unflinching generosity he shows his characters, many of whom are unbalanced, unsavory, or just unlucky. He'll make you care about them as deeply as he does.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent Story Collection,
By Lost In a Book (East Coast, USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Big Lonesome (Paperback)
This is a wonderful collection, full of barreling energy and vitality. A brave and precise writer, Ruland explores violence without flinching, and even locates the genuine humor sometimes latent in it. A range of styles keeps this collection fresh and witty. "Kessler Has No Lucky Pants" uses a Q & A format to marvelous effect, while the concise "The Hitman's Handbook" features a mob rub-out from several different points of view. Several stories take "genre" material--mobsters, fairy tales, Western desperadoes--and spin literature out of it. The most striking example is "Red Cap," a pitiless descent into a young girl's experience of war. The writing is inspiring; Ruland never commits a cliché.
Pamela Erens, author: The Understory |
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Big Lonesome by Jim Ruland (Paperback - September 15, 2005)
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