From Publishers Weekly
In the five short stories and the title novella that make up his fifth collection, Abbott ( Dreams of Distant Lives ) explores middle-class confusion and loss. Like Raymond Carver he displays an eye for the odd detritus of suburban life, writing of the police station that "now is a Bob's Big Boy restaurant." Most of the stories are in a reminiscent mode, featuring narrators who look back on their lives as series of dark epiphanies leading nowhere; the language is terse, elliptical and rich in metaphor. The protagonist of "Getting Even" could be speaking for all of Abbott's characters when he says, "I'd felt a shift in me, slight but as definite as wheat tides make." Although they are effective singly, the stories seem repetitious and similar taken together, and the stylized rhythms of Abbott's prose sometimes grate. The novella, about ex-college buddies reunited for a brief crime spree in Cleveland, Ohio, begins to sway under the weight of its own hip intensity well before the midway point.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Award-winning author Abbott's fifth collection includes five short stories and a novella. The five short stories will appeal to fans of football, philosophy, and the finely turned phrase. The good ole boys who people the stories are middle-aged men adrift in the modern world. Many are going through some kind of life crisis: the dissolution of a marriage, the need to come to terms with an absent parent, and falling in love are just a few. While the short stories take place in the Southwest, the novella is set in Cleveland and is altogether a darker work. It is also the strongest work in the collection. Recommended for modern fiction collections. Readers in Texas and Ohio will enjoy the strong sense of place evoked.
- Denise Johnson, Bradley Univ. Lib., Peoria, Ill.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
- Denise Johnson, Bradley Univ. Lib., Peoria, Ill.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
