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Johnny Too Bad: Stories
 
 
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Johnny Too Bad: Stories [Paperback]

John Dufresne (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 17, 2006

A collection by "a generous and lyric storyteller" (San Francisco Chronicle) known for his tragicomic voice and his unforgettable and lively characters.

In John Dufresne's stories people are caught unawares by trouble and opportunity in the act of going about their daily lives. A romantic woman, involved with her married boss, is proposed to by a Bulgarian on a tourist visa in search of a green card and must choose between a wedding and a love affair. A doctor who has killed two women escorts a flamboyant woman home to tell her about his rage and her foolishness. Four young brothers wander into a man's backyard claiming to be foster children. They share lunch and search for the foster home that doesn't exist. After a man tells his wife that he's leaving her and his children for his new lover, he's found dead in the morning. It's up to our literary hero to solve the mystery—murder, he wrote. A cross between William Faulkner (Times-Picayune) and John Irving (Detroit Free Press), Dufresne once again masterfully charts the power of truth and lies and the magic hidden in the mundane.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A smalltown policeman obsessed with a crime of passion; a hyperactive hound who prefers a Barbie to a bone. The vagaries of man and beast are fodder for acclaimed novelist Dufresne (Louisiana Power & Light, etc.) in his energetic second collection. Southern Florida is the setting, a place whose sultry clime seems to foster off-kilter displays. (Indeed, Dufresne's relentlessly skewed perspective means these 18 stories are best savored over the course of several days.) Florida is "tough on fiction writers," says the narrator of "Squeeze the Feeling." "How do you compete with daily life?" Dufresne writes of the betrayals that level romantic relationships, wondering how "you could go from finishing each other's sentences to not talking for twenty years." In the 18 linked entries of the title story, a woman has a love child with Bigfoot, a dog named Spot performs Shakespeare (sort of: he runs for the door when an ersatz Lady Macbeth rubs her hands and orders him "out") and two lovers wait out a tornado by curling up in a tub. "Life doesn't get any sweeter when you grow up," laments betrayed husband Rance in "Talk, Talk, Talk." But in the writings of Dufresne, whose tales are marinated in melancholy and sprinkled with wit, it is the piquant nature of the journey that keeps readers engaged.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

[There is] verbal dexterity everywhere in evidence in Johnny Too Bad . . . and a brilliant literary detective story that’s worth the price of admission on its own. (New York Times Book Review )

Dufresne has a knack for knowing what people think and, more specifically, how people think. . . . With this collection, he bores a hole into his brain and peels back the layers so that we can take a look inside: neuroses, secret whims, private desires. (San Francisco Chronicle )

Unfolds like a dream . . . a deliciously readable collection. (New Orleans Times-Picayune )

Product Details

  • Paperback: 247 pages
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company; 1 edition (May 17, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0393328716
  • ISBN-13: 978-0393328714
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.6 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,846,748 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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4 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Godiva of Storytellers, February 17, 2005
By 
John Dufresne's new book of stories is much like my box of Valentine's Godiva chocolates: I want it to last Forever. I try desperately to restrain my indulgence. But the complex textures, the bite of the bittersweet, the soothing of the lush soft centers, the discordant scrape of nut against tooth like an unwelcome truth, even the crinkle of the thin slips of foil that sounds like whispers of kisses; forgotten, remembered. I put the shiny red heart box on top of the refrigerator - I put Johnny Too Bad on my nightstand. From opposite ends of the hallway they tease me. I keep responding, and I'm not sorry in the least about giving in to either. I thank all that is holy for the tiny assaults of grief and the lingering embraces of grace that John Dufresne's characters and tales weave into my life (Lemonade and Paris Buns, Lefty). They fill me up, they change me, they make me better. My prayer is that John Dufresne will give birth to more and more stories; and Soon. I'll be waiting.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A man, his dog and a quest for love, February 21, 2005


Dufresne is a master storyteller. It only takes a few pages to set the theme for this collection and to establish the author's credentials in "Lemonade and Paris Buns", as four memorable children disappear into a system that has no memory of them.

This author has an extraordinary imagination, a whole world peopled by those who look like us, often verbalizing what we are unable to say, both the beauty and the dark heart of humanity: "Sometimes we`re better when we write." Generously scattered among his characters, a number of animals inhabit this landscape, especially the inimitable Spot, reminding those around them about unconditional love.

Dufresne mines his fertile imagination for ordinary citizens, old friends, murdering sociopaths, general miscreants and the hind-hearted folks who care deeply for their animals. But even here, there are aberrations, the man who puts his cancer-riddled dog down himself, the man who shoots his dog for disobeying. This is the territory of ordinary lives, where every day is filled with personal intimacies and dealings with strangers, every conversation an opportunity for another story, extrapolating on a theme, adding the details that ring true. The quirky, the odd, the unusual all mix with the mundane elements of life, the small moments that are memorable for their honesty and compassion.

From the wealth of their experiences, Dufresne's characters make unexpected observations, reacting to the changing conditions of their lives, ambiguous and boring for some, taken from others through random events, like Richard, "a person whose dreams are real but his hopes are not." Cancer is real and so is death; but then there are poignant introspections, islands of clarity in an often confusing world.

The title story of the collection, "Johnny Too Bad", is by far the longest and most thought-provoking, a confusion of wants, needs and possibilities, where the protagonist questions his own motives in playing "the game of undermining my own emotional prosperity". There is continuity to these stories, a thread of connectedness that makes them all of a whole, Johnny, Spot and Annick showing up periodically to struggle with their relationship and the direction of their lives. All of a piece, the disparate tales form whole cloth, an examination of the foibles and heartbreaks that define humanity and the quest for happiness, or at least contentment. Luan Gaines/2005.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Captivating stories..., June 1, 2005
Johnny Too Bad is a collection of several of the most interesting and darkest short stories I have read in a while. The characters are three-dimensional and have a great deal of humor, earnestness and an overall compelling voice that enthralled me from beginning to end. All of the eighteen stories in this collection were magnificent, but my favorites were, "Arlis and Ivy," "Congratulations, You May Already Be," "Based on a True Story," "Close By Me Forever," and "Who Are They Who Are Like Clouds?" The titles are definitely quirky, and they hook you in before you even begin to read the actual story. John Dufresne is a very interesting author and I look forward to reading more of his stuff in the future. In the meantime, I recommend this gem.
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I CALLED THE CLINIC AND MADE AN APPOINTment for a cholesterol test. Read the first page
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Tommy Ray, John Dufresne, Douglas Bleeker, Johnny Too Bad, Miss Doe, South Florida, Little Rose, Miss Eula, Waymore Claxton, Black Hawk, Color Tile, Fort Lauderdale, Sheridan Street, Broward County, Elysian Fields, Jesus Christ, Jimmy Spillane, New Mexico, San Francisco, South Dakota
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