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I, Rhoda Manning, Go Hunting with My Daddy: And Other Stories
 
 
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I, Rhoda Manning, Go Hunting with My Daddy: And Other Stories [Hardcover]

Ellen Gilchrist (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 2002
A new Ellen Gilchrist collection is always an event for the legions of her loyal readers. In I, Rhoda Manning, Go Hunting with My Daddy, Gilchrist writes again of one of her most beloved characters, with the hilarity, wisdom, and poignancy that marks all of her fiction. Here, a clutch of stories are told in the voice of Rhoda-as a child, as a divorced mother of three sons, and as an old woman, recalling the curse and blessing of being the only daughter of Big Dudley. In "The Abortion," a young girl whose father is dying and the boy who loves her struggle with clashing notions of what makes life meaningful. In "Remorse," a small town hairdresser revisits the last days of his best friend's life and what he might have done to save her. There is a rich vein of sorrow here, but Gilchrist lightens the burden with a grasp of how both folly and grace are born of love. As her characters, both new and familiar, spin out their unlikely fates, Gilchrist proves once again that there is no other Southern writer quite like her.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

The crisp, melancholy stories in I, Rhoda Manning, Go Hunting with My Daddy showcase Ellen Gilchrist's many gifts: her effortless prose, her empathy and emotional depth, her irrepressible optimism. In the title story, 5-year-old Rhoda Manning (a recurring character in Gilchrist's books) is allowed to go hunting with her father armed with a BB gun. The reader waits for the gun to hit the wrong target, but it never does. The story is about a disaster-free afternoon, although in "Entropy"--told from Rhoda's point of view when she is "old and gray"--we realize disasters arrive in many guises. Other stories enter the lives of Arab terrorists, pregnant teenage girls, hairdressers, and high-school football players. Gilchrist makes each character human--even the terrorist, bitten by bugs and dreaming of Allah as he waits in a tree for his target to appear. Throughout the collection, Gilchrist’s voice is soothing and trustworthy, full of hypnotic cadences: "Remorse fell like rain from heaven. The golden rain trees were putting out their leaves." --Ellen Williams

From Publishers Weekly

Following up on her critically acclaimed Collected Stories, Gilchrist delivers another satisfying collection. As her loyal readers have come to expect, her sure sense of place, whether New Orleans; Wyoming; San Francisco; or Fayetteville, Ark., provides the backdrop for headstrong, independent narrators. Five of the 10 stories feature the Rhoda Manning of earlier collections; here, she is a woman in her 60s, reflecting on her life and her family, particularly the unshakable influence of her thoroughly masculine father, Big Dudley. As Rhoda relates tales of her youth and the ongoing struggle with her father over the lives of her own sons, who are living the counterculture life of the 1970s, she realizes that she is more like him than she would like to admit. Another well-loved character, Nora Jane Harwood, is featured in "Gotterdammerung," a suspenseful and eerily prescient story of terrorist assassins. New characters levelly and unsparingly investigate the time-honored themes of family and complicated love: the high school couple coping with some difficult life choices in "The Abortion"; a gay hairdresser in "Remorse," who considers what he could have done to prevent the death of his best friend, Sally Sue; and "Alone," featuring 14-year-old Ginny, who is making the best of the departure of her best friend, Sabra. With these new stories, rendered in direct, clear prose, Gilchrist proves again that the people and places she conjures resonate in a wider world.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Little, Brown; 1st edition (September 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0316173584
  • ISBN-13: 978-0316173582
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.2 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,437,197 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 There's Nobody Like Her, July 30, 2006
If you have ever read even one book or short story by Ellen Gilchrist, then you have had a special experience that will never leave you. She is simply unique--there is absolutely nobody else like her.

This collection of short stories, which span several decades in no particular order, are full of heart-rending, exquisitely written, slices of life that have such pathos, such reality, such a truly human essence, that we can even love Rhoda Manning's Daddy, who is a racist to the extreme. Impossible, you say? Yes, with any other author, it would be impossible, it would be repugnant. But it is not...not that we FORGIVE him, but we see him through the loving eyes of his daughter from the age of 5 well into adulthood.

Other stories cover a wide range of different experiences including, eerily, a story about Middle Eastern terrorists who plan to murder several people on their leader's request. Gilchrist explains at the end of the book that this story was written BEFORE 9/11, which is truly scary. She had no clue that something REAL would happen. The difference is that in her story, there is a happy ending.

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ellen Gilchrist's Stories are Spun from the Heart, November 11, 2002
This review is from: I, Rhoda Manning, Go Hunting with My Daddy: And Other Stories (Hardcover)
Rhoda Manning is five years old when readers meet this recurring character in this collection of short stories by award-winning author Ellen Gilchrist. Rhoda Manning owns the stories and reveals them as a five year old child in the title story.

She also reveals herself as a mature adult and divorced mother of three and as an elderly woman clinging to all that is good from the past. Parents of teens will have no problem identifying with Rhoda's tale of woe as she parents three teenage boys who are wreckless and wild, spending their days crafting ways to defy their mother and their authoritarian grandfather.

It is a tale of pot and lies and the overwhelming job of parenting in the 70's. The brash and bold Rhoda is almost equaled by another Gilchrist regular, Nora Jane Harwood.

In this tale written prior to September 11, the protagonist finds herself in the locker room of an athletic club in Berkley, Ca when an earthquake jolts Nora and her two year old, Little Freddy. ...

...This is a story that ends too soon with characters so real you want them to live on.

Another story, "The Abortion", Gilchrist's characters reveal their courage and character ...

Gilchrist's stories and characters are above all else real. Their trials and tribulations are woven loosely in some cases, but always with an echo of familiarity.

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5.0 out of 5 stars I, Rhoda Manning, Go Hunting With My Daddy, July 29, 2004
By 
Rhoda Manning loves her daddy. She invariably disobeys him, but she loves him as a five-year-old in the first story of this collection, getting in trouble with a gun. She still loves him as a 60-year-old, getting in trouble climbing a tree to retrieve a golden bough so she can descend into the underworld and commune with him. Along the way we too get to know her daddy, Big Dudley. In one story, he takes charge of her wayward, pot-smoking teenaged sons in 1970s New Orleans. In another, he ups and moves to Wyoming and teaches the whole family to ski. In yet another, he sends middle-aged, newly sober Rhoda down the Wind River with her 12-year-old son in a canoe. He's frequently racist, often stubborn, but he's also fiercely protective, forceful, strong, and sensible. "He was always turning out to be right, and when we abandoned the clear paths he wanted us to travel we were always sorry."

Ellen Gilchrist fans may have some trouble recognizing this older, wiser Rhoda Manning, but underneath the sobriety and wisdom, our favorite smart aleck still holds court. "Watch nature videos. See who rules a group of chimpanzees and why. Then decide if you want your president to keep it zipped." Charmed as ever by Ms. Gilchrist's easy, droll storytelling, I realized that getting to know Rhoda over the years in these bite-sized vignettes makes Rhoda seem more alive and genuine than she would if I read an entire novel about her. This way we learn about her in bits and pieces, over time, the way we learn about people in real life.

There are Rhoda-less stories, too. One of them is sufficiently prescient of the events of September 11, 2001, that the author notes in a foreword that it was written in the fall of 2000. That particular piece features new characters, but the last story is in the voice of Traceleen, one of my longtime favorite Gilchrist creations. A former maid and current friend of a white woman she still calls "Miss Crystal," the Creole Traceleen now studies yoga and Buddhism. These disciplines stand her in good stead as she confronts the nanny her niece has hired for her precious grandnieces and, later, this nanny's drug-crazed boyfriend. I've always loved Traceleen because she's so dignified and serious, such a wonderful counterpoint to the crazy, selfish behavior of her rich employers. "I sighed. Once again lack of understanding had caused a problem. Could I find a way to set things right? It would have to begin in my own heart, as Jesus taught and I sometimes know."

These stories often have a fairy tale quality about them, and Ms. Gilchrist dispenses the lessons subtly and gently. There is real wisdom here, in simple, conversational prose. It's gratifying to see these characters settling down, to learn what they've learned. "Why in the name of God after all these years have I decided this is funny? Because everyone lived through it. Because no one died or was maimed or had their lives ruined."

Nearly everyone in these stories is well-off, and some are very rich. The women are gorgeous and talented, if sometimes troubled by men, children, diet pills, Arab terrorists, and unwanted pregnancy. If I had one tiny quibble, I'd like to see what Ms. Gilchrist would do with more ordinary characters --- those of us not so rich and not so beautiful. But that's not a flaw --- merely curiosity stimulated by a mature writer at the top of her form.

--- Reviewed by Eileen Zimmerman Nicol (ezn1@aol.com)
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
IN NINETEEN FORTY we were living in Mound City. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
condo fees, ski clothes
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Nora Jane, Little Freddy, Big Dudley, New Orleans, Sally Sue, Ann Marie, New York, United States, Miss Crystal, John Tucker, Wind River, Doctor Alford, Jackson Hole, Nanny Jane, Sweet Sister, Ten Sleep, Casper Mountain, Freddy Harwood, Holly Knight, Little Rock, Mardi Gras, San Francisco, Adrien Searle, Bighorn Mountains, Woodland Junior High
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