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Life in the Air Ocean: Stories
 
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Life in the Air Ocean: Stories [Hardcover]

Sylvia Foley (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 2, 1999
This stunning debut by a talented young writer brings together nine stories, some of them deeply shadowed, moving backward and forward in time to give us two generations of a family: the Mowrys of Carville, Tennessee. Daniel Mowry, a refrigeration engineer, is an expert on cold. His wife, Iris, is a casualty of the fifties: she's smart, but a woman sidetracked into marriage and motherhood. Daniel and Iris love their daughters, Ruth and Monica, in the best way they can. Ruth grows up to fixate on sex and one-night stands with Vietnam War veterans. Monica becomes pregnant by the man she lives with. In "Cave Fish," Daniel Mowry, Korean War veteran, expert in the design of domestic appliances (he tells himself he is making the world safe for women and children), is digging himself a real cellar, a crawl space below the kitchen floor. It's his way out, a place where he can tunnel down when his baby begins to scream.
In "Boy Wonder," it is 1937. Daniel is eleven and has a habit he can't beat. Sometimes he wakes up in the morning with the sheet plastered under him and turning cold. Daniel's mother says about it, "It's near every night with him. It's too hard." But Daniel sees a way out. He watches the crows fly swiftly from the yard and envies them. He's going to fly. He's going to be a Boy Wonder.In the title story, Iris is exhausted from the travails of early motherhood, and is driven further over the edge when her husband suggests that they move to South America.
Taking us from 1937 to 1982, these stories ex-plore the wilds of childhood and a barren landscape of adulthood, from the tar flats of Tennessee to the lush countryside of Bogotá, Colombia, where the Mowrys go to live in the early sixties in an attempt to bring their world into line. But no matter what they do to escape one another, they find themselves back together--a closed-in society of four. Theirs is a precipitous love that both cements the family and rends them apart, a love that the Mowry daughters endure and rebel against, each to reinvent her own.Simply and powerfully told, Life in the Air Ocean startles and moves us.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This powerful debut collection of nine interconnected stories reads like a novel and offers almost four dark decades in the lives of the dysfunctional Mowrys of Carville, Tenn. The characters' behavior?sometimes self-destructive, sometimes cruel?is lodged in a legacy of familial misery. "Boy Wonder," set in the 1930s, offers a glimpse of Daniel Mowry's troubled childhood. In reaction to his depressed mother's rejection, he violently throws himself off his porch steps in an attempt to fly. His physical pain mixes with pride at "bearing up under torment." Daniel's reaction to his mother's coldness translates into a successful career as a refrigeration expert by the 1950s; at home, his wife, Iris, takes solace in alcohol. In the title story, Iris, sunk into postpartum depression, neglects her infant daughter, drinks herself into a stupor and purposely slides off the roof of her house. In another tale, Daniel, frustrated when Iris has passed out drunk, sexually abuses four-year-old Ruth and tells the child the resulting blood is from a fall; later, Ruth throws herself down the stairs, trying to discover the meaning of her father's "tricky words." Daniel's job temporarily relocates the Mowrys to Bogota, Colombia, and in "Cloudland," which takes place in the 1960s, Daniel sinks further into the mire by sexually abusing his daughters Ruth and Monica. The last two stories portray the girls grown into troubled women in the 1970s: Ruth, disaffected and terrified of intimacy, is addicted to casual sex with strangers; Monica has a caring husband and begins to glimpse happiness. If Foley relies too much on self-inflicted physical injury to suggest her characters' emotional pain, she deftly conveys the most searing details of their lives just as skillfully as she documents their subsequent numbing despair and defiance. Agent, Irene Skolnick.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Connected but distinct stories of a single family make up this first collection by Foley. The Mowrys of Tennessee are a dysfunctional family whose story spans the 1930s to the 1970s and includes a job transfer to Bogota, Colombia. Daniel Mowry feels like a failure when he's rejected at the blood bank. Meanwhile, his unhappy and unbalanced 1950s wife, Iris, contemplates the sky from the roof soon after giving birth, reflecting on the rocketry term for the sky, the "air ocean," as her helpless baby wails below her. Daughters Ruth and Monica grow up neglected and ignored, entering reluctantly into the uncertainties of adulthood. The tedium and oppressiveness of their daily lives is finely chronicled and overwhelmingly gloomy. The backdrop of the times intrudes occasionally (e.g., war in Vietnam), but mostly their lives are led in the smothering clasp of family life. Well done, but must all "serious fiction" be so grim??Ann H. Fisher, Radford P.L., VA
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 161 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1st edition (February 2, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 037540063X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375400636
  • Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 5 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,726,864 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The devastating precision of great writing..., April 26, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Life in the Air Ocean: Stories (Hardcover)
Sylvia Foley's Life in the Air Ocean is a quick read in that it grabs you and won't let go. But layered and exact observations about the inner life and its consequent actions reward the careful reader. Her precise, beautiful writing captures the moments across years that make up a family history -- not the public one, but a private, under-the-skin history.
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5.0 out of 5 stars At once, heart-wrenching and funny., April 25, 1999
This review is from: Life in the Air Ocean: Stories (Hardcover)
This book is outstanding. A collection of stories, it reads more like a novel. Ruth, who might be referred to as the main character, is a survivor. But what makes her different, what makes her compelling, is the complexity of her responses to pain. Unwilling to let those who hurt her control her, she takes her own pain hostage, showing it, as it were, who is in charge.

These stories are not about victimization; they are about the high price of rejecting the idea of victimization. Ruth gets hurt, yes. But her responses to pain are the responses of an organism. Her survival -- and indeed this is precisely what it is -- is survival in the most Darwinian terms: Ruth survives by adapting -- not by running away.

There is triumph here, redemption in Ruth's fear of fear. This book is not so much a book to be read as a book to keep on reading.

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