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Long Odds: Stories [Paperback]

Gordon Weaver (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 9, 2000

In Long Odds, Gordon Weaver's latest collection, each male protagonist struggles for moral and emotional strength to cope with a universe gone awry. Each of the eleven stories centers around a circumstance that is both ordinary and shockingly unpredictable.

A small-time flop of a con man in the "psychic" business becomes dependent on his inspirational talks with a dead hustler from a bygone era. An eccentric helplessly watches a crumbling society from a table in his favorite diner. A proper Bostonian buries his black-sheep brother in rural Mississippi. A group of newly divorced men takes up daily exercise, in search of solace, in an upscale mall.

Some of Weaver's characters win in the end, some fail miserably, but all of their stories depict their confrontations with self and surroundings. Each story lures the reader forward despite the potential disappointment and self-destruction that often loom just ahead for the characters. The father of a blind girl builds an elaborate Christmas light display for her as his wife watches with bewildered disapproval. A part-time college English teacher travels the freeways from job to job, and from woman to woman, to avoid the paralysis of stasis.

Written in the bold, sharp style that is Weaver's trademark, Long Odds includes stories that shift in mood and tone from the serious to the comically ironic, but which are unified by a common sense of isolation as each man labors to make sense of his place in the world.

Lauded by Publishers Weekly as presenting "characters whose cries are so human, raw and mordant, the reader forgets the fiction and is delivered inside the experience," Weaver skillfully introduces a level of depth and intensity to situations that may appear commonplace at first glance. This inventive collection offers a gallery of men who, outwardly ordinary, are revealed as complex in their humanity, defined as much by their sensibilities as by their actions—or their failures to act.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Although frequently on target in their criticism of middle-class complacency, these 11 stories about men bewildered by contemporary mores often take their critiques too far. Weaver (The Way We Know in Dreams) dwells on humankind at its most embittered and alienatedAnot a bad practice in theory, but one-dimensional when pushed to excess. In "The Divorced Men's Mall Walker's Club," several newly single men, "outcasts, losers... pariahs" because their marriages have failed, speed-walk around a shopping mall each morning and make lascivious comments about the nubile young women shoppers. In the title story, a man's monthly night out with his drinking buddies turns sour when he wins too much at dice, and one particularly sore loser informs him of an infidelity he didn't know his wife had committed. Some of the stories parody the writer's profession too fiercely. A mammoth literary convention in Las Vegas creates the stage for a wrenching satire of literary self-awareness and self-congratulation in "Solidarity Forever!" An aging bachelor in "Gilded Quill: The Story of Jones" joins a circle of fanatics that passes for a writing group in his suburban enclave by writing a piece about how it feels to jog. The tales are best when they are at their most whimsical, occasionally acquiring a poetic grace. The human mannequin at a clothing store who narrates "Mannequin" is proud of his gift for performanceAwhich backfires when he begins to imitate the customers in an insulting, grotesque manner. "Viewed from Lanta & Wally's" describes the protagonist's belief that his friends and neighbors are behaving bizarrelyAwhen he's too psychologically near-sighted to notice he's as eccentric as any of them. The stories mix emotional accuracy with an unsettling tendency toward overgeneralization; the dialogue sometimes swerves into black and Jewish ethnic stereotyping. Weaver pities his characters for their confusion, and yet these artfully composed stories may suffer from an overdetermination bordering on fatalism. (June)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews

An eighth collection by the prolific author of the recent omnibus volume Four Decades (1997). The 11 moody stories here are closely focused (often first-person) explorations of embattled quotidian lives characterized by interminable stasis--like that of the aging loner who haunts a rundown diner (Viewed from Lanta & Wally's), a disabled Viet Nam vet attempting interaction with other lonely souls (On Watch for Big Red), or--in one of the two best stories, Without Spot or Wrinkle--a stuffy northeasterner who learns that his recently deceased renegade brother had led a far more enriching, and love-filled, life than his own. Weaver's stabs at literary-academic satire (Solidarity Forever!, Gilded Quill: The Story of Jones) are embarrassingly weak, but when he sticks to ordinary Joes in hopeful conflict with fate and circumstance (such as the devoted father who builds a lavish Christmas light display for his blind daughter, in the touching Imagining the Structure of Free Space on Pioneer Road), he's with people we can care about, and in his element.A mixed-bag collection. -- Copyright © 2000 Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 208 pages
  • Publisher: University of Missouri; 1ST edition (June 9, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0826212913
  • ISBN-13: 978-0826212917
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,981,658 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Long Odds shows a Master at Work, June 16, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Long Odds: Stories (Paperback)
In LONG ODDS, Gordon Weaver's characters desperately grasp at simple and sometimes absurd ceremonies to find hope in their lives. Kleczka in the title story routinely goes to a once-a-month gambling and drinking party with his high school buddies. While he notes the erosions of their lives and delights in his winnings, he counts his blessings-a house in the suburbs, the second best looking girl from high school as a wife, two good kids, and a good job at a Saturn dealership. But with a mean, cruel remark from one of his buddies, he psychologically unravels his life. In the "The Divorced Men's Mall Walkers Club," Leichtfuss arrives at 6 in the morning to join his clique, the divorced men, for their walk. The social pecking order breaks into groups, and Leichtfuss sees the triteness in the mall and the walkers, but etches just a bit of dignity and hope from it. And Q in "Q: Questing," Q finds relief from his dismal academic slave life in cruising the freeways. Weaver takes the quotidian of our world and lets his characters glimpse the hopelessness in their lives and in our culture. But deep down they have a hard won dignity that keeps us rooting for them because in a way they are us. And as the names of the characters indicate, we get a picture of the old ethnic neighborhoods giving way to corporate middle American. But this collection is not just more dismal modern angst. In his own unique way, Weaver exaggerates the desires of the characters and their worlds are exaggerated just enough so that we can't help but laugh at them and us. Weaver's stories should be far more popular because of their humor and pathos, and aficionados of fiction should take a look at the stories to look at how a master subtly manipulates the tools of the trade: point of view, verb tense, phrasing, colloquialisms, flashbacks, and flashforwards.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Little-Known Gem, July 31, 2010
By 
Reg Nilas (Northeastern US) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Long Odds: Stories (Paperback)
This thin book ranks among my top ten short story collections. Of the eleven stories included, two-thirds of them are above-average. Most involve everyday situations, with a slight twist... where the "ordinary" evolves into an emotional/philosophical revelation for the protagonist and/or reader. The protagonists are all men, without exception... and most male readers will find that several of these stories touch a familiar chord. The book is worth buying for one story alone... the last entry in the collection, "Imagining the Structure of Free Space on Pioneer Road". The story is about a young couple whose marriage is buckling under the weight of coping with their blind, seven year-old daughter. It takes place as Christmas approaches, and is so powerful and inspiring that I re-read it every year during the Christmas holiday.
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