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Hand of Buddha [Paperback]

Linda Watanabe McFerrin (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 1, 2000
Everything changed the day the Buddha's hand arrived in the mail. These stories are about women of various ethnic backgrounds, from various geographic regions of the U.S., who find themselves in situations that spin wildly out of control or silently disintegrate. Yet, somehow McFerrin's characters maintain their sense of humor, if not their equilibrium.

The Hand of Buddha leads us into a mature, sophisticated territory with playfully erotic, irony and edgy humor.

Linda Watanabe McFerrin is the author of two poetry collections: Chisel, Rice Paper, Stone and The Impossibility of Redemption Is Something We Hadn't Figured On, and the novel Namako: Sea Cucumber, She is a winner of the Katherine Anne Porter Prize for Fiction, and lives in Oakland, California.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Women struggle to make sense of their lives in the 12 stories of this warm-hearted collection from novelist and poet McFerrin (Namako: Sea Cucumber). Most manage to pull themselves together, aided by luck, independent thinking and more than a little New Age spirituality. In "Coyote Comes Calling," a woman named Sam is told by her doctor that she's either pregnant or has a fibrous tumor. Sam promptly climbs a rock in the desert, lights up a joint and meditates on what the cosmos is telling her. The answer comes when the thing inside her kicks against her ribs. In the most tender (but implausible) tale, "A Little Variety," an aging neighborhood gossip named Mona meets a 27-year-old man-child at a local thrift store. He's exchanging old clothes for new because he doesn't know how to do his laundry; Mona teaches him and in short order they fall in love, get married and live happily ever after despite the multi-decade age difference. And in "Rubber Time," the most accomplished entry here, a freelance writer of erotica finds a real-life relationship overtaken by her work in a delicious way. When these stories succeed, they do so largely because McFerrin's obvious generosity and personal warmth animate them. Others, however, are marred by amateurish missteps. McFerrin misfires in "Pickled Eggs," a story about a woman desperately hoping to have a child, with a two-page account of surfing the Web, an activity impossible to distill into enthralling literature. And she propounds some uncomfortable stereotypes in "Los Mariachis del Muerto," in which superstitious Mexican housemaids become convinced that the real culprits behind the SIDS-related death of a child are the Smurf dolls scattered around the nursery. The majority of McFerrin's stories, however, avoid such mistakes and undoubtedly will be inspirational fodder for spiritually inclined readers. (Sept.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

McFerrin, author of the novel Namako: Sea Cucumber (1998), is also a poet and a travel writer, and these disciplines imbue her highly imaginative, droll, and slightly fabulist short stories with ebullient lyricism and a sense of adventure. Each story is distinctive in setting and circumstance, but her saucy female narrative voice remains nearly consistent, as does her fascination with unexpected forms of love. In "A Little Variety," a woman finds her much younger husband at the five-and-dime. In "God and All the Angels," a woman dumps her philandering boyfriend but continues to look out for his unhappy young daughter. In the title story, Tess is at her wits' end as her Alzheimer's-stricken mother drives away one caretaker after another, until a friend sends her a Buddha's hand, a fruit from Asia. Serenity enters their lives, and she stops fighting reality and gives full reign to her filial love. The underlying matrix in McFerrin's smart, sexy, and magical tales is her belief in "embracing possibilities" and accepting the chaos of life, a message well worth imparting. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Coffee House Press; 1st edition (September 1, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1566891043
  • ISBN-13: 978-1566891042
  • Product Dimensions: 7.5 x 5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.5 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,755,229 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Poet, travel writer and novelist Linda Watanabe McFerrin (www.lwmcferrin.com), has been traveling since she was two and writing about it since she was six. A contributor to numerous journals, newspapers, magazines, anthologies and online publications, she is the author of two poetry collections, an award-winning novel (Namako: Sea Cucumber) and short story collection (The Hand of Buddha), and the editor of a travel guidebook (Best Places Northern California,4th ed.) and four literary anthologies.

A past winner of the Katherine Anne Porter Prize for Fiction she teaches and leads workshops in fiction and creative non-fiction and she is NOT afraid of the dark.

Her most recent book is Dead Love, a supernatural thriller set in Asia, due out from Stone Bridge Press in September 2010 and now available for Pre-Order. The Dead Love serialization, along with near-zombie Erin's Daily Slice, are both online at http://www/deadlovebook.com.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wry, warm, insightful stories that bridge gaps, September 2, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Hand of Buddha (Paperback)
The wry, humorous, warm-hearted viewpoint of the story-teller in these tales of women switching gears to get out of crisis-mode builds bridges across great divides-between religion, ethnicity, location, and between the secular and the sacred. I loved Linda Watanabe McFerrin's novel, Namako: Sea Cucumber, and this book is an amazing follow-up. I can't wait to read what she writes next!
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Linda Watanabe McFerrin Writes With The Hand of Buddha, September 5, 2000
By 
Brian Tacang (El Prado, NM United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Hand of Buddha (Paperback)
The alchemy of Linda Watanabe McFerrin's work is a combination of several elements she mixes in that brilliant workshop-of-a-mind of hers. She manages to provide gorgeous details that reveal much about her characters while not clobbering the reader over the head with heavy exposition. Her observations of the human condition are full of profundity and incredible heart. Her awe-inspiring mastery, though, is often elusive--as potent in what she chooses not to tell as it is in what she chooses to tell.

And, when you've reached the end of one of her exquisite stories, you are left both satisfied and wanting more. In fact, most of the stories in The Hand Of Buddha stayed with me for several days after I had completed them--especially the title story--because I felt a sense enrichment and yearning at the same time.

McFerrin's stories almost seem as though they were written by a divine, non-judgemental hand--Buddha's hand--and as such, can serve as reminders to us all that the seeming everydayness of our lives is truly numinous.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Twelve Fingers on the Hand of the Buddha, June 13, 2006
This review is from: Hand of Buddha (Paperback)
Twelve stories take us to places and cultures described with travel-writing deftness and punctuated with image and lyrical phrase of a poet. Oakland-based writer Linda Watanabe McFerrin brings all her writing skills to bear in these fictional worlds of women stepping out--to claim their own worlds.

I read this collection first in 2002 (it first came out in 2000) and picked it up again after viewing the photographs of THE HAND OF BUDDHA in Douglas Sandberg's portfolio--which reminded me of McFerrin's stories.

In the title story Tess receives a beautifully wrapped package of the citrus fruit (that looks like two hands praying) from Sirena, "the ethereal proprietress of...a tea shop and apothecary". The note says ". . .The Buddha's hand will stay fresh for a very long time, but it is sweetest when used right away. Do not wait too long." (p. 72)

In these stories women support women in a world intermingling the senses and the spirit. Illness, death, erotica, love, pregnancy by whatever means, the vicissitudes of marriage, finding one's "fascinating woman"--all rub against each other like so many fingers on "The Hand of the Buddha".

--Janet Grace Riehl, author Sightlines: A Poet's Diary
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Sam, a.k.a. Samantha Iphigenia Darwin, d.b.a. Sam's Wampum Wigwam, Main Street, Sedona, Arizona, was having a coyote week. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
rubber time, pickled eggs, other maids
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Cora Mae, Father Quito, Seņora Stetson, Seņor Stetson, Marina Del Mar, Ted Editor, Animal Control, Lināa Watanabe, Linba Watanabe, Virgin of Guadalupe, Last of the Mohicans, Linaa Watanabe, Maiva Quinn, Sam's Wampum Wigwam
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