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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential reading for students of the short story genre
O'Connor's in-depth analysis goes to the heart of what the short story genre is about. It is written with unstinting commitment and erudition, and never strays into shallowness of any kind. For those who love his stories, it is perhaps surprising to find the beguiling storyteller in this academic vein. What is convincing is not so much his arguments as his evident passion...
Published on March 4, 2005 by Ogden Gnash

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19 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars An influential but grotesquely dated work
There have been few fulllength studies of the short story, and Frank O'Connor's was one of the first and remains among the most influential. But it has held up miserably over the years. Even granted that he published the work in 1962, was it really necessary for O'Connor to refer so patronizingly to Katherine Mansfield as "the brassy little shopgirl of literature"? Or to...
Published on January 26, 2005 by Jay Dickson


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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential reading for students of the short story genre, March 4, 2005
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This review is from: The Lonely Voice: A Study of the Short Story (Paperback)
O'Connor's in-depth analysis goes to the heart of what the short story genre is about. It is written with unstinting commitment and erudition, and never strays into shallowness of any kind. For those who love his stories, it is perhaps surprising to find the beguiling storyteller in this academic vein. What is convincing is not so much his arguments as his evident passion and long reflection on the topics he chooses. To grapple with the theories he propounds, such as that of the short story representing "submerged populations" is to try and share a little in the maestro's genius. Something to come back to again and again. I'm sure my little review hardly does justice to it, so I suggest you read the book and see for yourself.
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19 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars An influential but grotesquely dated work, January 26, 2005
There have been few fulllength studies of the short story, and Frank O'Connor's was one of the first and remains among the most influential. But it has held up miserably over the years. Even granted that he published the work in 1962, was it really necessary for O'Connor to refer so patronizingly to Katherine Mansfield as "the brassy little shopgirl of literature"? Or to treat Joyce's DUBLINERS as if it had been written in lightning on the summit of Mt. Sinai? (Of a sentence from "The Sisters," O'Connor writes, "You may play about as you please with alternatives to this phrase; you will find no combination of adjectives that will produce a similar effect, nor any way of reading the passage that will produce a different one.") Objectivity goes straight out the window; as a result, this study is much more useful as a picture of the literary attitudes of O'Connor's time than it is as any sort of rigorous study of the form it purports to analyze.
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The Lonely Voice: A Study of the Short Story
The Lonely Voice: A Study of the Short Story by Frank O'Connor (Paperback - April 1, 2004)
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