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A Nurse's Story and Others [Hardcover]

Peter Baida (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 1, 2001

The lead story in this posthumous book, a revelation of a dying nurse's memories, was the first-prize winner in the 1999 O. Henry Awards. Tragically, within months of receiving this recognition, Peter Baida died at the age of 49.

"What a gifted storyteller we lost when Peter Baida died so young!" said John Barth. "Tough love and unsentimental compassion for the old, infirm, and fallen run through these wise and moving stories. In several of the best of them, one feels a whole novel's worth of life."

The stories intertwine to form an emotional arc which carries the reader from despair to joy and back again. Baida is unhesitating in his close-up exploration of current social dilemmas. Recurrent in these stories are issues of ethical obligation to those living on the margins of society, the ethics and politics of unions and unionization, the contrasting values of various social classes, and the genuine significance of plain-old ordinary life.

Baida presents both sides of the equation in his stories as supposed social solutions pose additional problems for his characters. He writes serious stories about the inherent duplicity of outcome following even the most well-informed life decisions.

In "No Place to Hide" when confronted by the son of his mother's black housekeeper, a divorced, middle-aged, Jewish man in New York faces the uncertainty of his own life and the complexities of race and friendship.

In "Mr. Moth and Mr. Davenport" as old issues of mob violence and union control resurface among the new realities of old age and loss, an unexpected love affair blossoms for retired residents of a Detroit apartment building.

In "A Doctor's Story" a young man faces his family's past and his own moral confusion during discussions with his dying grandfather, a former Nazi doctor.

"A wry, radiant compassion suffuses these remarkable, moving, deceptively simple stories," Johanna Kaplan says in praising this book. "With an encompassing intelligence and economy that take your breath away, Peter Baida gives us Œordinary' characters-nurses, patients, parents, grandparents, old unionists, old friends-whose urgent memories and imperfect passions reveal and celebrate the subtle heroism of everyday life."

Peter Baida (1950-1999), a Baltimore native, worked for twenty years at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, for much of that time as the director of direct-mail fundraising. Published in The Gettysburg Review, American Literary Review, The New York Times, American Heritage, and The Atlantic Monthly, he was the author of both fiction and nonfiction, including the book Poor Richard's Legacy: American Business Values from Benjamin Franklin to Donald Trump.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

From Baida's O. Henry Award-winning title story about the final days of a Catholic nurse, to "The Reckoning," in which a corrupt university president's family is torn apart by his downfall, the nine stories collected here give candid accounts of people from various walks of life and the events that unite and divide them. The contrast between deterioration and strength (both physical and spiritual) is a common theme for Baida, who spent 20 years working for the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; he himself finally succumbed to hemophilia in 1999. "Family Ties" is told from the perspective of a dying man's daughter as she recalls the drastic step she once took to make him stop abusing her mother; meanwhile, the mother, unaware of what her daughter did, is pressuring her to reconcile with him. Many of the stories display an excellent knack for dialogue: "Points of Light" involves a circle of elderly Jewish friends trying, with varying degrees of success, to make sense of a world beset by crime, illness, conservative pundits and corrupt politicians over pickles and pastrami at their favorite deli. In "No Place to Hide," Richard, a white marketing executive, is confronted in a park by Sweetness, the black, unemployed son of the woman who was once his mother's housekeeper. Now middle-aged, Sweetness cajoles, threatens and bluffs his way into Richard's life. "America, is there something you forgot to tell me?" Richard wonders and it's a question that many of Baida's characters seem to be asking. His stories offer no grand epiphanies, no tidy resolutions but they address complicated issues of loyalty, class, race, ethics and family in a spare, direct style that is insightful and moving.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From the Inside Flap

A collection of compelling stories that includes the first-prize winner in the 1999 O. Henry Awards

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 238 pages
  • Publisher: University Press of Mississippi; 1 edition (April 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1578063183
  • ISBN-13: 978-1578063185
  • Product Dimensions: 7.2 x 5.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.3 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,186,501 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars COMPASSIONATE, COMPELLING HUMAN PORTRAITS, January 15, 2002
By 
Larry L. Looney (Austin, Texas USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: A Nurse's Story and Others (Hardcover)
The stories in this volume are incredibly well-written and moving -- Peter Baida was obviously a talented, caring writer. I was unfamiliar with him or with his work until I chanced upon this book on the 'recent fiction' shelf at the library -- I'm really glad I picked it up.

The stories here deal with people we might consider to be ordinary until we read about them. The love of his characters gives Baida the power to flesh them out fully, to make them whole -- to make us care about them. Mostly told as reflections on their pasts, they depict turning points -- times at which we are given a choice to make in our lives or in our actions. The characters don't always make the best choices -- as in real life, hindsight is much clearer that our 'real time' options -- but Baida passes no judgements upon them. He presents the facts of their lives and allows us to draw our own conclusions. Even those characters whose choices are poor -- even reprehensible -- are not without their redeeming qualities, rather like the human beings who populate this globe.

Baida's narrative powers are immense -- and his characters live and breathe on the pages before us. The title story in this collection was the first-prize recipient of the 1999 O. Henry Award -- and well-deserved. It's a shame that Baida died shortly after receiving this honor. We can only imagine what literary gifts he would have given us since then -- but this volume is a fine testament to his wonderful talent.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Modern Morality Tales, December 1, 2005
By 
Brandon Mann (Jacksonville, Alabama) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Nurse's Story and Others (Hardcover)
Summary: A collection of stories about moral and ethical dilemmas and the impact of individual choices on society.

This volume of nine passionately written stories is, if nothing else, a lesson in perseverance.

Author Peter Baida submitted his title story to 22 publications. All rejected it. A more easily discouraged writer might have given up after, say, the 10th rejection, but Baida continued submitting his story. Eventually, editor No. 23, Peter Stitt of The Gettysburg Review, accepted and published "A Nurse's Story."

You can probably guess the rest. "A Nurse's Story" won first prize in the 1999 O. Henry Awards. It was a vindication for the author and an indictment of the 22 editors who apparently saw no merit in the story.

However, this book is more important for its contents then for its history.

Peter Baida's voice is distinctive. His short stories boast a solid moral center, a concern with day-to-day ethics and responsibilities. Baida appears to be an unsentimental Christian whose outlook is similar to that of the Catholic Worker movement. He is clearly for the "little guy" and against the dehumanizing effects of both corporations and unions. He reveals a social consciousness that harkens back to the proletarian literature of the 1930s, but leavened with the irony and ambiguity of the 1990s.

Baida also reveals a streak of mysticism and other-worldliness - in stories such as "A Nurse's Story" and "The Rodent," the dead come back to converse with the living - qualities that perhaps turned off editors more inclined to realism and minimalism.

But Baida's writing isn't screechy and preachy. He writes smoothly and subtly, with humor and some experimentation. "Points of Light," a story of how one's politics change with age, is written almost entirely as dialogue.

Many of Baida's stories don't follow the classic unity of time; instead, they experiment with chronology, skipping back and forth through the decades, covering a lifetime or several lifetimes in a few pages. Baida can show us "the big picture" while still focusing on the details. Not unlike the short stories of Alice Munro, Baida's short stories feature enough character and plot to sustain a novel.

In stories such as "Class Warfare" and "Mr. Moth and Mr. Davenport," Baida comes across as pro-union, but with a jaundiced eye. He doesn't ignore the sincere concerns of management, nor does he ignore the corruption and violence of the unions. "Class Warfare" is a pitiless account of a newspaper strike, narrated by one of the strikers, and tells of deals made with the devil by both sides in the conflict.

Baida knows that all actions - and inactions - have consequences, some of which reverberate through society and across generations. This is what Robert Penn Warren once called "the spider web theory of history": No matter what spot of the web is touched, the entire web vibrates.

Baida also knows that individuals sometimes must make agonizing choices in life, and that sometimes the morally correct choice can still have disastrous consequences for the innocent.

In the heartbreaking "The Rodent," a corporate whistleblower prevents his company from marketing a potentially dangerous drug. His choice saves countless unknown lives, but destroys all he holds dear - his reputation, his career, and his family.

That story's moral counterpoint is "The Reckoning," a tale of how a college administrator's pride and greed ruin the lives of his children long after he has died and they have grown into unhappy adults.

"A Doctor's Story" is also about choices - how a doctor in the Germany of the 1930s chooses his patients' quality of life over their right to life, and thus helps jump-start his society from euthanasia to the Holocaust.

The O. Henry Prize-winner, "A Nurse's Story," is about Mary McDonald, a nurse and union organizer whose humble but principled life has a domino effect. Her choices benefit the lives in her community for generations to come. The story has almost the same virtues as "It's A Wonderful Life," but without the saccharine and treacle.

Sadly, the author's own Cinderella story of winning the O. Henry Award - a story O. Henry himself might have penned - does not have a happy ending. Peter Baida died of complications of hemophilia two months after winning the prize. He was 49 years old.

It was the kind of hard reality that Baida the artist would have appreciated.

Peter Baida's A Nurse's Story and Others is thus a posthumous publication. It is also a worthy memorial to the humanity and vision of its author.
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