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Carrying the Torch: Stories (Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction)
 
 
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Carrying the Torch: Stories (Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction) [Hardcover]

Brock Clarke (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction September 1, 2005
The stories in this collection occupy a world at once as familiar as a suburban backyard or a southern college’s hallowed football field and as strange as a man who buys Savannah, Georgia, and tries to turn it into the perfect Southern city as part of his attempt to win back his estranged wife. The fictional territory of Carrying the Torch, is in short, Brock Clarke’s, one in which the surreal and the hilarious share a neighborhood with the painfully real and the sweetly ironic. Here readers will encounter characters dislocated by work and love, by huge losses and life’s small dramas, men and women who have migrated South in search of redemption—or at least in the hope of leaving the worst behind.
 
In these tales about what people try to leave and find they can’t, about the lies we tell the people we love and the myths we create to make life livable, Marly Swick cites an “exceptional originality” as well as an “amazing emotional resonance, a haunting quality.” “Notable for their balance of sentiment and restraint, the music of their language, and the haunting human longing that coexists with the irony and the humor,” as Lee Martin remarks, these remarkable stories carry forward a tradition reaching from Flannery O’Connor to John Cheever and Donald Barthelme—and arrive at a brilliance all their own.
(27000410)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Clarke maps out the New South in the nine assured stories of his second collection, subtly linking America's decaying Northern cities and Southern suburban sprawl with the frayed emotional microcosm of the migratory families who inhabit these territories. In the title story, set in sterile suburban Atlanta during the 1996 Olympics, a wronged wife whose wry, breezy voice overlays painful emptiness crafts a wooden model of her philandering husband's penis while she fantasizes about severing the real thing. The decayed core of a marriage mirrors the urban blight of Savannah, Ga., in the fantastical "For Those of Us Who Need Such Things," about a husband who learns a bleak lesson about the myths of authenticity and true love when he buys and attempts to revitalize the Southern city in an effort to win back his estranged wife. "I'm not the man I once was and feel no need to defend myself," declares the unreliable narrator of "The Son's Point of View," a deficient father who inevitably asserts his version of history while trying to inhabit his son's point of view. Clarke's light touch in these layered stories brings home the plight of his unfaithful husbands, dissatisfied wives and angry children in search of home and meaning.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Be prepared to be surprised on every page of Clarke's collection of brilliant short stories. Oh, they may not be the kind of shockers that accompany truly cataclysmic plot twists, and there are no deus ex machinas lurking in the final paragraphs. Clarke's literary bombshells are more subtle than that. His are of the appreciatively hushed "wow!" and "whoa!" variety that accompany a sublimely crafted sentence or a distinctive turn of phrase that comes seemingly out of nowhere, with its unexpected ability to render large truths in such a pithily appropriate way that even the most critical reader will sit up and take notice. Variously expressed in the wistful longings of a disenchanted wife in "The Fund-Raiser's Dance Card," the deep psychic pain of abuse victims in "The Apology," or through the existential conundrum explored in "For Those of Us Who Need Such Things," Clarke's piquant ruminations on the human condition are both subdued and effusive, simultaneously bitter with hard-won wisdom and giddy with dewy-eyed optimism. Carol Haggas
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 186 pages
  • Publisher: University of Nebraska Press; First Thus edition (September 1, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0803215517
  • ISBN-13: 978-0803215511
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.8 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #946,533 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1.0 out of 5 stars Waste of Time, December 8, 2011
This review is from: Carrying the Torch: Stories (Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction) (Hardcover)
If you like reading the same story over and over again than this is the book for you. After the first three stories about cheating husbands I put this book back on the shelf and probably will not pick it back up again.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good storytelling, but..., November 25, 2005
This review is from: Carrying the Torch: Stories (Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction) (Hardcover)
The author writes well and can spin a yarn, and the first four stories are standouts. Past the fourth though the collection starts lose some variety and edge. It isn't the ubiquitous problematic husband that's tiring, but just the way this character is approached again and again, seeming to have the same voice over and over. Plus, some of the stories are too long and talky. That said, if you're wanting to see the same sad, inarticulate husband or marriage examined in several scene changes, this is your book.

Some great stories still, and every one is graced with fine sentences. "For Those of Us Who Need Such Things" and "The Reason Was Us" are really great stories and definitely worth the admission price.
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3 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing, November 24, 2005
By 
Guy (Hamilton, Ohio) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Carrying the Torch: Stories (Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction) (Hardcover)
I thought "What We Won't Do" was an excellent collection of stories and was looking forward to "Carrying the Torch." I haven't yet read every story, but the stories I have read are extremely disappointing, for a number of reasons. For one, in at least four stories, Clarke gives us philandering husbands. The author seems to see no other way to create domestic turmoil than to have a loutish man cheat on his wife. This seems to be a form of politically correct (and outdated) male bashing rampant in some liberal academic circles, but not every man cheats on his wife, nor is every woman a victim. By using cheating husbands over and over, it seems that the author has an axe to grind regarding infidelity, but the axe quickly becomes dull with repeated use. Also, in "Apology," a male character tells his three previous wives that a priest had abused him, and each wife gives a callous response. Again, the author is using some rather shallow and unconvincing behavior to create a dramatic context. "For Those of Us Who Need Such Things" is a weak attempt at some sort of neo-Barthelme fiction, minus Barthelme's brilliant language, surrealism and satire. In Clarke's story, the narrator buys Savannah, Georgia, the sort of implausible act that happens frequently in Barthelme (see "The Dead Father," "The Balloon," etc.), but the mistake that many neo-Barthelmaniacs make is that they try to mix the fantastic with the mundane, with tepid results. (In a previous Clarke story, a grown man goes back to elementary school. I think something similar also happened in a Barthelme story.) "The Fund-Raiser's Dance Card" (featuring a cheating husband) is such an obvious homage to John Cheever's "The Swimmer" that Clarke even names one set of neighbors "the Cheevers." Overall, Clarke treats his characters with contempt, not compassion. There's a school of thought that believes an author should have compassion for his characters, even if they are creeps and losers. One sees this compassion in Raymond Carver, where many of the male characters are louts, yet Carver manages to impart some dignity and forgiveness to his wounded men.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
I decided last night that someday soon I am going to rip my husband's penis off with my bare hands. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Lee Ann, Hotel Utica, Sarah Beth, The Ghosts We Love, Dance Card, South Carolina, Carrying the Torch, New York, Rafer Johnson, Shady Oaks, Laura Ann, Beth Ann, Bob Sassas, Amy Vincent, Genessee Street, Sarah Jameson Fuller, Strawberry Lane, North Carolina, Civil War, Clemson University, Dale Lerner, Florida State, Jonas Salk, Tybee Island
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