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55 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not To Be Missed
This book replaces a tattered notebook of Mr. Helprin's stories containing copies I have culled from various and sundry sources and to which I often return. The writing is beyond my ability to praise. Reading his work can be compared to listening to a gifted musician; his prose is musical and ideas profound.

These are moral tales. I believe that much of...
Published on October 31, 2004 by J. Brian Watkins

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9 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Helprin is one of my favorite authors
I deeply regret saying this (primarily because Helprin's Winters Tale is one of my all time favorite books) but this collection of short stories is really bad. I have read most of the book. I kept sticking with it, hoping that the next story would vindicate the faith I have in Helprin as a writer. But time after time Helprin wallops the reader with the exact same pathetic...
Published on October 18, 2005 by clifford


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55 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not To Be Missed, October 31, 2004
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This book replaces a tattered notebook of Mr. Helprin's stories containing copies I have culled from various and sundry sources and to which I often return. The writing is beyond my ability to praise. Reading his work can be compared to listening to a gifted musician; his prose is musical and ideas profound.

These are moral tales. I believe that much of Mr. Helprin's fiction evidences a deep frustration with the fact that we live amidst such richness of knowledge and opportunity in an incredibly beautiful world yet we fall prey to lesser enticements; we ignore or forget the truths upon which anything good and true must rest. They are stories about discoveries of surpassing worth and importance. We owe it to ourselves to turn off the TV, put down the newspaper, and give Mr. Helprin a chance to point us to our better natures.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "His writing remains the gold standard of American fiction", December 7, 2004
By 
T. Gervat "Tom Gervat" (Westwood, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
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Perhaps it is good that we are blessed with the riveting wonderment of a Mark Helprin short story collection every
other decade or so. His stories are so infused with light that their sheer brightness frightens away those who would prefer their fiction to reflect things the way they would want them to be rather than the way they are in the light of eternity. "The Pacific And Other Stories" is fiction bathed in glory, yet with its feet still on the ground. Even through absurdity and laughter, the power behind the prose never wavers, remaining irrevocable and true as a swallow on it's way home. Mark Helprin's anointed prose ever lingers on the threshold of immortality, paradoxically beyond words. It lures and beguiles you like a tender breeze on a warm summer's evening, only to sometimes return and break the deepest part of your heart in the end. But when the end comes, you will find that you have made a wondrous journey which you would not have missed for all the world.

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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The sweetest tears, January 21, 2005
For many years now, when I forget how precious life is, I re-read Helprin's short stories, and, inevitably, I cry, regardless of the outcome of the story. His storytelling moves me profoundly, in ways that I'm just too inarticulate to express. And so it is with "The Pacific". I'll remember every word of "Monday" for the rest of my life. I'm humbled by his ability to capture what makes life worth living, even in the darkest moments of his characters' lives. I'm glad to have him back on my bookshelf (where he doesn't spend much time, considering I've read "Soldier" at least 12 times; 3 years ago I bought a cheap paperback version because hauling the hard back copy to the beach was impinging on my carry-on limit and the sand content accumulated between the pages was making it too heavy to lift).

Buy and treasure this book.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book of light, March 3, 2005
By 
V. J. Peters (SANTA ANA, CA, USA) - See all my reviews
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This is a book filled with the imagery of Light. Not the light of the innocent day. Rather, a light that emanates from the Life tempered by Autumn and Winter; it is a joyous light like laughter from the belly. In this book the pale suhshine has "everything about it of spring about to break the seige of winter." Consider this: "...the appearance of a million gently burning lights that gradually took the place of the bright scales with which the setting sun had armored the face of every building." In each story, the glorious scepter of redemption casts its healing gaze on the chief characters of each story, lives tempered by wars and losses-grevious losses. Yet, out of these losses arise characters annointed by a differing purpose, a more noble one. I especially loved the story "Perfection." In it a small Jewish boy, Roger Reeves, has lost his parents in the German death camps. He attends religious school all the while haunted by the question, "Why must the righteous suffer?" He challenges God to a duel on-of all places-a baseball diamond-the house of Ruth, Yankee Stadium. Superb ending.
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23 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book filled with gifts, November 30, 2004
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Reading Mark Helprin's stories, short and long, call forth every emotion. They are all about love and honor and the gifts parents, children and lovers give to one another. Some of the gifts are sent but never received. Some of the gifts multiply and change the lives of the donors who join in the giving.

The stories Monday and Perfection are so powerful that I found I had to tell whoever I was talking to about them.

Discovering that Helprin had written a new book was a gift to me. Treat yourself and read it.
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The most gifted lyrical writer alive today, November 23, 2004
By 
James A. Scott (Lexington, MA USA) - See all my reviews
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Mark Helprin has a lyrical gift for appreciating the world as few writers do today. Pasternak and Chekhov did, but this fine talent is no longer common. Among living writers I think Helprin is unsurpassed in his ability to finely tune a sentence, to make you feel the colors of an Italian afternoon or the bittersweet nuance of a memory. Mark is a bit conservative politically as his Wall Street Journal writings show, but I agree that he is, if not the finest, among the best two or three that are writing today.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars High Art, January 7, 2005
By 
If you've never read Mark Helprin, I can't think of a better place to start. He has written transcendent novels and stories, but this collection resides in the pantheon of fiction, American or otherwise.

I'm not even fully through this collection and yet I cannot recommend this enough. At the risk of sounding melodramatic, Helprin's stories are to American fiction--in soul and craft--what Whitman's work is to American poetry.

These stories are diverse. Some are comedic, some are profound and some are "merely" touching. Each stands on its own, defiantly, humbly and sometimes in between. In reading them you experience the art of a writer at the absolute pinnacle of his talent...and that pinnacle is lofty indeed, and the view is spectacular.

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20 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A humanist, beyond all else. an optimist despite evidence., October 31, 2004
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This is a beautiful book, infused with emotion, depth and passion. Helprin is an intellectual giant, but in his fiction he leads with his heart. Fathers populate many of these stories; they regret, hope, love, and look for impossible redemption. In short, they live.
Buy this book. It is, simply, the best short story collection of my lifetime.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Moving and Superb Fiction, July 3, 2006
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This review is from: The Pacific and Other Stories (Mass Market Paperback)
Superb fiction with the single most moving "9-11" story I have ever read.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A writer Like No Other, December 9, 2005
By 
James M. Turner "Lost Muse" (San Diego, Ca United States) - See all my reviews
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If I were to meet Mr. Helprin and could ask him one question, it would be, "What writers have influenced your work?" For his writing, his style, his tone, are like no other writer's. His style is aesthetically exquisite. The author's voice pours through his work and delivers to the reader something fresh, a sense of morality, of honor, of respect and light. I love his work because it is unusual, different from any other fiction I have ever experienced.
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The Pacific and Other Stories
The Pacific and Other Stories by Mark Helprin (Mass Market Paperback - June 28, 2005)
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