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Black Elvis (Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction)
 
 
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Black Elvis (Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction) [Hardcover]

Geoffrey Becker (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 15, 2009 Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction
In this funny, touching collection about music, identity, liars, and love, Geoffrey Becker brings us into the lives of people who have come to a turning point and lets us watch as they take, however clumsily, their next steps.

In the title story, an aging black singer who performs only Elvis songs despite his classic bluesman looks, has his regular spot at the local blues jam threatened by a newly arrived Asian American with the unlikely name Robert Johnson. In "Man Under," two friends struggling to be rock musicians in Reagan-era Brooklyn find that their front door has been removed by their landlord. An aspiring writer discovers the afterlife consists of being the stand in for a famous author on an endless book tour in "Another Coyote Story." Lonely and adrift in Florence, Italy, a young man poses as a tour guide with an art history degree in "Know Your Saints." And in "This Is Not a Bar," a simple night on the town for a middle-aged guitar student and jazz buff turns into a confrontation with his past and an exploration of what is or is not real.

In his depictions of struggling performers, artists, expectant parents, travelers, con-men, temporarily employed academics, and even the recently deceased, Becker asks the question, Which are more important: the stories we tell other people or the ones we tell ourselves?

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In twelve tightly-coiled stories, Becker (Dangerous Men, Bluestown) mines the thwarted dreams, failed relationships, and wayward lives of chronically luckless characters. The award-winning title story is a good introduction to Becker's work, featuring his recurring muse: the down-and-out musician, in this case an African-American Elvis impersonator upstaged by a Chinese Robert Johnson. "Another Coyote Story" is narrated by a Native-American writer living in Sherman Alexie's literary shadow. In "Jimi Hendrix, Blue Grass Star," a street musician fakes a brain tumor in an effort to woo a beautiful but cold violinist. In "Santorini," middle-aged and recently-dumped Laura makes a play for her best friend's much, much younger son. The cumulative effect of these stories is disheartening; protagonists always end up worse off than they were at the story's start. The rewards Becker offers readers take the form of wry humor and the occasional lapse into grace, alongside the more immediate pleasures of "cigarette and pork grease smell, of cold beers and loud music."
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"Black Elvis addresses the most potent of the bittersweet mysteries, herein writ right, that animate our condemned kind: family, loyalty, religion, memory and love. If there were a short story Hall of Fame, Geoffrey Becker would be installed in its rotunda--on the Jumbotron, in fact, keyboard held aloft in much-deserved triumph." --Lee K. Abbott, author of All Things, All at Once: New and Selected Stories

"These are wonderful stories, both humorous and deadly serious, and sometimes with a touch of magic as well. If you think you don't know these characters--in all their variations--you surely will before you are halfway through a page." --Elizabeth Strout, author of Olive Kitteridge

"Many of the characters in this collection are journeyman musicians--has-beens and never-weres--but make no mistake, Geoffrey Becker is no journeyman himself. He is an artist of the highest order. Without flourish or pretension, Becker delivers these sparkling stories with conviction, verve, and perfect pitch." --Don Lee, author of Wrack and Ruin

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 200 pages
  • Publisher: University of Georgia Press; First Edition edition (October 15, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0820334103
  • ISBN-13: 978-0820334103
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,658,185 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Geoffrey Becker's latest novel, Hot Springs (Tin House, 2010), was a Sunday New York Times Editors' Choice, and his recent story collection, Black Elvis (U. of Georgia Press,2009), won the 2008 Flannery O'Connor Prize for Short Fiction. His previous books are: Dangerous Men, (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1995),a collection which won the Drue Heinz Literature Prize; and Bluestown, a novel (St. Martin's Press, 1996). His story, "Black Elvis," was selected by E.L. Doctorow for The Best American Short Stories, 2000. Other awards he has received include the Parthenon Prize, the Nelson Algren Prize from the Chicago Tribune, a James Michener Fellowship, an NEA fellowship, a Heekin Foundation fellowship, two Maryland Arts Council Awards, and the Great Lakes Colleges Association Award for best first book of fiction.

Born in Boston, Geoff grew up in Princeton, NJ, and attended Colby College in Maine, where he majored in English, and also studied music. In the early '80s, he lived in Brooklyn, NY, where he played guitar and performed both solo and in various bands at venues including The Lone Star Cafe, O'Lunney's Country Music City, and the Eagle Tavern. Later, he earned an MFA from the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop, where he was also active on the local music scene. He teaches fiction writing at Towson University, and in the low-residency MFA program of Queens University, Charlotte.

 

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5.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing portraits of failed musicians and bad decisionmakers, August 7, 2011
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This review is from: Black Elvis (Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction) (Hardcover)
I really enjoyed Geoffrey Becker's novels - Hot Springs and Bluestown - so I was looking forward to this collection, particularly after having read a couple of the stories that appear here in literary magazines ("Another Coyote Story" in Crazyhorse and "Black Days" in the New England Review.) Becker has a great, straightforward style. The stories don't always have an overly dramatic or plot driven beginning, middle & end, just as often they're slice of life vignettes that offer insight into what makes a particular person tick. And often the writing just takes off, as it does in this passage from "A Naked Man" when the character ruminates on the unborn baby (which he calls "Frick") in his wife's belly, which got its start from an artificial insemination from a man he imagines is named "Brad":

"And now, Brad has begot Frick, who had somehow managed to grab onto my wife's uterine wall and ontologically recapitulate phylogeny, moving from tadpole to fish to alien space-being (we'd seen him at the twenty-week ultrasound in all his Kubrick-esque weirdness, bigheaded and dreaming of world domination), to the restless waiting child who liked to practice Tae Bo in my wife's stomach while she tried to paint."

On the basis of the subject matter, one could easily assume Becker is a frustrated musician. Many of the stories feature men who love music and the guitar, but have to deal with the limitations of their not-so-great talent.

The 12 stories in the collection are:

1. Black Elvis - 12 pp - An elderly man, who looks every bit the part of a Delta bluesman, prefers to play Elvis songs at a ribs and blues joint every week during the open mic night. While he has been a legend in his own mind as "Black Elvis," he has to wonder if he has any talent at all when a young Korean with the name "Robert Johnson" takes the stage one night and blows the crowd away with his renditions of blues classics.

2. Know Your Saints - 15 pp - After his girlfriend breaks up with him, Larry moves to Florence to live with his aunt, a performance artist, and poses as an art history graduate student to give tours of the local attractions. One of the tourist clients may or may not experience stigmata when viewing a fresco of St. Francis having his own stigmata when eying the Coronation of the Virgin.

3. Cowboy Honeymoon - 17 pp - A teacher leaves Baltimore after a co-worker suddenly dies and travels cross country to visit his sister who runs a hotel in the Southwest. There he hooks up with a woman who pretended to be on a "cowboy honeymoon" to get a better room at the hotel for herself and a boyfriend she's not too happy with.

4. This Is Not a Bar - 13 pp - A guy with a lot of failures in his life - 3 marriages, a job as an unqualified preparer of tax returns, and a sometimes girlfriend - hooks up with a younger version of himself and tries to impart some wisdom.

5. Iowa Winter - 18 pp - After his son dies of AIDS, a man is asked by his ex-wife to tell the son's boyfriend to move out of her house, where the son had come to die. The son's partner is sick too, and the father, an alcoholic living on disability, tries to befriend him after he lets the young man come live with him.

6. Imaginary Tuscon - 12 pp - Two untenured college professors at different schools navigate the challenges of their job searches and long-distance relationship.

7. Man Under - 14 pp - A rambling tale of the misadventures of two college grads struggling as musicians in Brooklyn. Their landlord lets them play loud music in their apartment, hoping they'll drive out the elderly man in a rent-controlled apartment beneath them, but all their equipment gets stolen when the landlord removes the security door to their building.

8. Another Coyote Story - 11 pp - A guy dies in a skiing accident and then his afterlife consists of filling in for author Sherman Alexie on a book tour. The story features a unique structure that switches back and forth between the present of his afterlife and the moments - told backwards from end to beginning - that led up to his death.

9. Jimi Hendrix, Bluegrass Star - 17 pp - A young American man and woman connect as street musicians in Europe. At first the guy only knows four songs (and a killer Hendrix, playing the guitar with his teeth, impersonation). The woman, though, is a talented bluegrass musician. Any attempt at romance is hindered by her engagement to another man at home, but he manages to get some sympathy from her by pretending to be dying of cancer.

10. Santorini - 15 pp - A great story about a woman's bad choices after a lifetime of failed relationships. On vacation in Greece with her best friend and the friend's college-aged son, she doesn't resist when the son comes on to her and then compounds the mistake by telling her friend about it.

11. The Naked Man - 13 pp - An interesting portrait of all the mixed feelings a man has during his wife's pregnancy, which got its start from an artificial insemination. Interestingly, his wife is a painter and for her gallery opening, the main painting featured, "The Naked Man," is a nude which has his face, but an ex-boyfriend's body - and imaginatively enlarged groin. His manhood is substituted for everywhere.

12. Black Days - 16 pp - A professor who's also an amateur musician travels with the lead singer of his band to play a concert in Italy, but the concert was cancelled long before they arrived, and they're left with nothing to do but play out the bitter end of their romantic relationship.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable yet thought-provoking short stories, July 3, 2010
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This review is from: Black Elvis (Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction) (Hardcover)
If you are a fan of Salinger's "Nine Stories," then you will certainly enjoy the quirky and sometimes dark humor of Geoffrey Becker's "Black Elvis," a collection of stories which draws on the author's own experiences of life in the music and academic worlds. While thematically reminiscent of Faulkner and Eugene O'Neill in his portrayal of the human condition, the author clearly imprints his own voice on each one of these diverse stories, completely absorbing the reader into fully-formed worlds of his own creation.
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