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You and Me and the Devil Makes Three (Esquire's Fiction for Men) [Kindle Edition]

Luis Alberto Urrea , Jess Walter , Aaron Gwyn , Benjamin Percy , Tyler Cabot
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Three new stories for men, by three of the most ambitious and talented names in fiction
 
A search for an eight-ball of cocaine, turns into a pistol-whipping and executions in Aaron Gwyn’s stunning and disquieting “You and Me and the Devil Makes Three.” Gwyn, who was born in Tulsa and raised on a cattle ranch, is the author of the novel The World Beneath and the story collection Dog on a Cross, about which the Boston Globe wrote, “In Gwyn’s expert hands, nothing, including good or evil, is ever so simple . . . part Flannery O’Connor, part Shirley Jackson, and wholly original—so brilliantly compelling.” This new story is no less shocking and revelatory.
 
In “Young Man Blues,” Luis Alberto Urrea introduces us to Joey, the son of a motorcycle gangster tasked with caring for his mother while his dad serves time in Pelican Bay. Packed with rottweilers and German Lugers, roaring car engines and doughnut girls, this story is as riveting and funny as it is affecting. Urrea, a 2005 Pulitzer Prize finalist for nonfiction and a member of the Latino Literature Hall of Fame, is the author of The Hummingbird’s Daughter, which was twenty years in the making and named a book of the year by numerous publications. His most recent novel, Queen of America, is a New York Times “editor’s choice” selection for 2011.
 
Jess Walter’s “Big Man” depicts middle-aged men trying to relive their glory days in their local recreational basketball league. Beer bellies, ex-wives, and middle age come together in a hilarious and absurd riff on mortality that is vintage Walter. Walter’s novels include The Zero, a finalist for the National Book Award, and The Financial Lives of the Poets, which Time called “the funniest way-we-live-now book of the year.” He most recently published Beautiful Ruins, which Richard Russo describes as “an absolute masterpiece.”
 
Esquire's Fiction for Men is a new ebook series whose mission is to publish the type of original short stories men love to read—plot-driven, immediate, essential, and impossible to put down.


Product Details

  • File Size: 222 KB
  • Print Length: 50 pages
  • Publisher: Esquire (June 5, 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0086KQ208
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #168,715 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
(3)
4.3 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition
When I was a kid growing up in the 1950s, I remember trips to the barber shop, perusing the shop's well-thumbed magazines while waiting my turn. I can't recall all of the magazines, but three of the ones I remember very well were Esquire, Argosy, and Field & Stream. I don't know about the latter two, but Esquire is still going strong. When I was offered the opportunity to review the first volume of a new ebook series from Esquire, I was very happy to do so. If the collection of three original short stories in "You and Me and the Devil Makes Three" is typical of what's coming, the series should be very successful.

"You and Me and the Devil Makes Three" by Aaron Gwyn was the first story and was the most dramatic of the three. Actually, the words "shocking," "raw," and "brutal" all come to mind. This was a gritty story of a very unholy alliance of three young men, and showed just how quickly a seemingly ordinary, mundane situation could turn extremely violent in a heartbeat. As much as I read the newspaper headlines and watch courtroom dramas on TruTV, I was still not prepared for the intense visceral response that the story evoked.

"Big Man" by Jess Walter was a warmly humorous story of a team of mostly likable over-the-hill jocks trying to win a few games in the county's recreational basketball league. They were desperate enough to ask the team captain's ex-wife's new lover to play. Not that he was a superstar, but he had played some semi-pro ball in Europe. The question was: would he be enough to make a difference? In contrast to the other two stories, "Big Man" was as much about the characters as it was the storyline.

The third story, "Young Man Blues" by Luis Alberto Urrea, was a quirky story about the son of a motorcycle gang leader. The gang leader had been sent away to prison, so Joey and his mom were on their own. Joey was a good kid, holding down a job of babysitting old Freddie Filgate. It wasn't a great job, but Freddie's wife paid in cash, and Freddie wasn't too demanding. If only Butchie, the neighborhood tough guy, would leave Joey alone. The story had a great ending, leaving much to the reader's imagination.

These were first rate stories, and I enjoyed each of them very much, although for shock value and raw emotional response, "You and Me and the Devil Makes Three" was my favorite.

It's easy to fear for the future of the short story, but Esquire's Fiction for Men is evidence that the art of the short story is still very much alive.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Two out of three ain't bad June 12, 2012
Format:Kindle Edition
The first installment in Esquire's "Fiction for Men" series only partially fulfills its mission, described as publishing "the type of original short stories men love to read -- plot-driven, immediate, essential, and impossible to put down." I think men (and women) love to read good fiction, whether plot-driven or character-driven, but even by Esquire's narrow standards, only two of the three merit attention. Those two, however, make the volume worth reading.

The title story, by Aaron Gwyn, is written in spare prose that suits a spare idea: a young coke user has a harrowing experience and, months later, finds himself in a room filled with lawyers and the family members of a murder victim. The story is written in the second person, a technique that rarely works, but my more significant complaint is that the scant power generated in the middle section of the story is wasted. The story's final scene is pointless and utterly unrealistic. 2 1/2 stars.

In Jess Walter's "Big Man," the middle-aged members of a spectacularly unsuccessful recreational league basketball team decide to recruit a big man to play in the post -- the boyfriend of a team member's ex-wife. The story is peppered with intelligent humor but it's also poignant in its exploration of a man who confronts the end of a season -- not a basketball season, but a season of his life. 5 stars.

"Young Man's Blues" by Luis Alberto Urrea is a slice of a young man's life. He makes a daring decision to do the right thing but there will eventually be a price to pay. Characters have strong, believable personalities and the tension in the story's second half is palpable. 4 stars.
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4.0 out of 5 stars More, Please July 22, 2012
Format:Kindle Edition
I hope Esquire does more of these, with more stories. The Jess Walter story alone is worth the purchase price.
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