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If the Sky Falls (Yellow Shoe Fiction)
 
 
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If the Sky Falls (Yellow Shoe Fiction) [Paperback]

Nicholas Montemarano (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Yellow Shoe Fiction September 2005
If the Sky Falls is the debut short-story collection from award-winning fiction writer Nicholas Montemarano. These eleven stories show why Jayne Anne Phillips has called Montemarano "an American stylist capable of redeeming our darkest dreams."

Redemption in these intense and sometimes violent stories is found in the lyrical prose, in the act of storytelling itself. A young man tries to rescue his sister from her abusive lover, and in the process must revisit his own family’s violent history ("Note to Future Self"); a home healthcare worker pops pills and takes two men with cerebral palsy to a strip club ("The Usual Human Disabilities"); a man has a breakdown years after witnessing a brutal murder and doing nothing to help the victim ("The Other Man"). In "The November Fifteen," a man is taken from his home and tortured, though he has no idea why; when he returns home he finds a different kind of torture awaiting him.

Two of the stories—"Shift" and the Pushcart Prize–winning "The Worst Degree of Unforgivable"—are stylistic tours de force. But style in this collection is always at the service of story. Montemarano’s fiction maintains that rare balance between traditional storytelling and experimentation: his work is innovative without being flashy, sincere without being sentimental. In an age of hype, If the Sky Falls truly is the real thing—an original and important achievement in the short-story form.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Montemarano plays with the purpose and effect of storytelling in his dark, powerful debut collection (after A Fine Place) even as he crafts believably troubled psyches. The unreliable narrators of these 11 first-person stories are haunted by memories of violence and cruelty they can neither forget nor make sense of; only occasionally do they find redemption and tenderness in unexpected ways. In "To Fall Apart,'' a man revisits his sister's childhood disappearance, "the story I have revised so many times that it is now more memory than imagination,'' fantasizing a different, happier ending for her. Stories serve this man as anodynes, albeit temporary ones, allowing him some form of dignity and hope. In "The Usual Human Disabilities,'' a caretaker for two imperious cerebral palsy sufferers cracks under the pressure of his thankless work and abuses his charges in a warped effort to treat them extra-special. "The November 15" is a deeply disturbing account of a man broken by arbitrary torture. The stylistically playful if not so readable piece, "The Worst Degree of Unforgivable,'' details obsessive-compulsive behavior and barely suppressed rage via an 11-page-long single sentence. Montemarano handles brutality and abjection with ambiguity and subtlety while taking assured metafictional leaps.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Nicholas Montemarano is the author of the novel A Fine Place. His stories have appeared in Esquire, Zoetrope, DoubleTake, The Pushcart Prize 2003, and many other publications, and have been cited as Distinguished Stories of the year in The Best American Short Stories for 2001 and 2002. He has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, and the Edward Albee Foundation. He teaches at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 211 pages
  • Publisher: Louisiana State University Press (September 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0807131229
  • ISBN-13: 978-0807131220
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.6 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,610,180 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Nicholas Montemarano was born in Brooklyn in 1970 and grew up in Queens. He is the author of the short story collection "If the Sky Falls" and the novel "A Fine Place." A new novel, "The Book of Why," is forthcoming from Little, Brown. His short stories have been published widely in magazines such as Esquire, Zoetrope: All-Story, Tin House, The Gettysburg Review, and AGNI. His writing has won many awards including a Pushcart Prize and a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship. He teaches at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, PA.

 

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Average Customer Review
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Montemarano is a rising star to watch, September 25, 2005
This review is from: If the Sky Falls (Yellow Shoe Fiction) (Paperback)
Having read both "A Fine Place" and this latest collection, "If the Sky Falls," I'm convinced that Montemarano is the most important new writer to watch. In the tradition of Joyce Carol Oates, Jayne Anne Phillips, Tim O'Brien, and Don DeLillo, these stories hit a nerve and don't let up. He does what the supposed whiz kids of the moment seem to be afraid of doing, writing what risks most without promising redemption, using measured doses of experimentation that, like O'Brien and Phillips, not only serve the story but are necessary to the story, and writing with heartbreaking honesty, an overused term, but one that is more than applicable here. Nicholas Montemarano is not only the best writer to come on the scene in over a decade, he competes with the greatest of novelists and short story writers. This book more than deserves all the buzz surrounding it.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Check out Nicholas Montemarano!, September 13, 2005
By 
A Reader (Brooklyn, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: If the Sky Falls (Yellow Shoe Fiction) (Paperback)
What makes Montemarano's dark world so alchemical is the way in which he creates a mythology out of the broken morality, vicious hate, unrealized dreams, and the many other bleak threads from which our society is woven.

There is a quiet strength that runs through these stories. It is the strength of real self-taught morality. It is the strength of a person who is not afraid to examine the world around him. It is the strength of honesty. There is risk everwhere, and major accomplishment.

This is exceptionally good work. If you are interested in contemporary literature, you should read Montemarano.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Darkly Penetrating Collection Marked for Literary Greatness, May 4, 2009
By 
This review is from: If the Sky Falls (Yellow Shoe Fiction) (Paperback)
Rising literary star Nicholas Montemarano cuts to the chase. Each kernel of conflict is immediately apparent in his stories, accompanied by a pregnant air of frustration that seems sure to yield some rash outburst. Montemarano's new short-story collection If the Sky Falls sees him creating dark, self-contained worlds with little exposition, then populating each with a pack of troubled souls, often estranged family members or worn-down regular stiffs.

"Sometimes you're not a very nice person," complains a disabled man to his caregiver, who narrates the story `Shift'. This gratingly nervy, self-conscious narrator loosely binds the stories together, as he probes each soft spot in family relations, each point of implication passed by matter of course. All the while, the egoism of our nameless narrator remains indelible. In `Shift', domestic routine and the demands of his charges, a convalescent couple, push him closer to the end of his work-day, and potential catastrophe. A crass carelessness on the part of the caregiver combines with a husband's petty instinct to initiate a battle of wills at the outset.

"Don't leave them sharp, he says. I want them smooth. That way I won't scratch myself.
His arm jabs near my face. I cannot hold his hand in place long enough to file his nails.
Have you seen the scratches on my legs? he says.
The closer his arm gets to my face the more his arm shakes. I tell myself I am not going to flinch. I would rather he hit me. I would rather he break my nose.
Your eyes flutter like butterfly wings, he says. What happened? Did your mommy smack you around?
He looks at his wife in her chair. Do you see his eyelids? he asks her.
She opens her mouth wide, which means she's laughing, then she drools on her shirt. He tells me to wipe her chin.
Our little butterfly boy, he says."

Sacrificing punctuation to the gods of sparsity, Montemarano drives the pocket absurdities in his prose past the reader with barely a pause. The embedded dialog becomes repetitive, lulling one into acceptance of various off-beat scenarios: one man, emotionally shattered after his girlfriend's death, drives to a clinic to have himself shot; another throws a girlfriend's dog out of a residential high-rise; still another group of unfortunates are kidnapped and tortured over their nonexistent relationships with a man named Greg November.

Each story explores a microcosm, a strange reality created or unchallenged by insular characters. In `Note to Future Self', a woman in an abusive relationship calls to ask her twin brother to help her get out. Extricating his sister from this situation becomes a battle for the narrator. Real danger mixes with a neurotic imagination to produce his particular brand of anxious cowardice. Themes of abandonment and familial spite found here and throughout If the Sky Falls could certainly make lesser writing unbearable, but Montemarano's genuine insight into human behavior breeds curiosity and drives the reader's enjoyment beyond any possibilities offered by the bland, structural resolutions common to most short stories.

Reading Montemarano, one is initially struck by the brazen originality of his character interplay. But the true accomplishment of this collection is the execution of a rather striking maneuver- almost like a novel, the stories here gather aspect, import, and context as the collection progresses. While the voice of each story varies, the nameless family characters, the generic outsiders, the interloping do-gooders of random interaction, and the man in the black sedan, that frightening, unknowable figure parked across the street, all move through these stories casting the darkest of shadows on the first person, perhaps even impressing a seemingly impenetrable ego.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
usual human disabilities, man throws dog out window, bear cub sound, november fifteen, dishwashing sponge, bathroom chair, worst degree, first collar
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Greg November, Jesus Christ, New York, Dan Havel, Sky Falls
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Surprise Me!
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