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Long Made Short (Johns Hopkins: Poetry and Fiction)
 
 
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Long Made Short (Johns Hopkins: Poetry and Fiction) [Paperback]

Stephen Dixon (Author)

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Book Description

Johns Hopkins: Poetry and Fiction November 1, 1993
"Mr. Dixon wields a stubbornly plain-spoken style; he loves all sorts of tricky narrative effects. And he loves even more the tribulations of the fantasizing mind, ticklish in their comedy, alarming in their immediacy".--"New York Times Book Review".

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

The 12 short stories in this collection by novelist and storywriter Dixon, author of the acclaimed Frog ( LJ 1/92), concern loss and the oblique ways in which people--primarily men--cope with it. Long, somewhat cryptic sentences only slowly reveal: the reader stumbles into the middle of an exchange and must decipher the context, the relationships, even the subject. While some of the stories are fantastical, the most successful are painfully accurate depictions of the everyday routines that mark family relationships. In "Man, Woman, and Boy," we eavesdrop on heartbreaking scenes, real or imagined, from a marriage that may or may not be on the brink of ruin. Dixon's male characters are self-absorbed and self-deceiving; they rationalize choices and obsessively probe their pains. His tolerant, caring, and straightforward women hold the moral high ground. Recommended for academic and large public libraries. --Eleanor Mitchell, Arizona State Univ. West, Phoenix
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

You know all that babbling that goes on in your mind? All the static of random memories, bursts of old songs, goofy fantasies, and the mutter of self-consciousness, such as "I'm walking down the street; I hate these shoes; did I unplug the iron?" This constant chattering, called the monkey mind by teachers of meditation techniques, is Dixon's turf. Most of the dozen stories in this collection reflect a narrator's circuitous mental process. The scene might be a living room in which the wife is correcting papers, the only child is working on a jigsaw puzzle, and the husband is fuming. First he imagines a fight with his wife, already expecting to be rebuffed later in bed, then he feels a rush of love for his son, then a corresponding flood of feeling for his wife. Dixon is exposing the absurdity and confusion underlying the most ordinary of circumstances, but he also moves in the opposite direction, writing peculiar little tales, such as "Crows," in which a man suddenly finds that he actually can shoot with his finger, and "Flying," in which a sense of parental inadequacy causes a man to daydream about being sucked out of a plane with his daughter. A shrewd and humorous collection by an inventive and skillful writer. Donna Seaman --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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More About the Author

Stephen Dixon is the author of twenty-seven works of fiction including, most recently, Phone Rings and Old Friends (both published by Melville House). His novels Interstate and Frog were both finalists for the National Book Award. Frog was also a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award. His work has received the O. Henry Award, the Best American Short Stories award, the Pushcart Prize, The American Academy Institute of Arts and Letters Prize for Fiction, and he has been a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship.

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I can be such an egotistical self-righteous pompous son of a bitch; unaccepting, nonaccepting, I can't think of the right word but it's what I so often am and all of it's what I was again. Read the first page
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