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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Love and Death in the Hinterland,
By
This review is from: The Society of Friends: Stories (Paperback)
Kelly Cherry's collection of short stories is an outstanding example of refined English language prose as well as a philosophical exploration into the meaning or meaninglessness of human existence. However, inspite of these grand subjects, Ms. Cherry often choses the most humble of subjects and the smallest events to story the plight of her sometimes hapless, often kind, characters as they forage for love and understanding in the Wisconsin college town neighborhood where these stories take place. There is heartbreaking irony and tenderness in these stories. Ms. Cherry deftly written sentences sweep the reader toward the edge of consciousness itself, and indeed we stare over the edge and into the abyss more than once, and then we are swept back again with great waves of emotion to the everyday existence we cling to. There is great humor in these stories as well as an undertone of darkness in every sentence. Only a poet of Ms. Cherry's brilliance could render such a remarkable display without calling attention to the language itself. These are stories, not merely for the student of literature but for the student of life. Above everything else there is a great reverence for human beings and their spiritual quest in a world that harbors few places of refuge for the vulnerable.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Just like the end of summer...,
By Akethan (Arlington, VA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Society of Friends: Stories (Paperback)
I put this book up and down over several months - and that was mostly an effect of the power of certain segments of the book.
The stories move through overlapping lives - and relationships. Universally overcoming their own obstacles - molestation, racismn, sexuality, living and dying... realizing one is aging. Strong and weak - the characters feed off of each other and show a need for one another even at their stubbornest moments. Nina is the main character - but I aim to tell you - so that you give him your undivided attention - the real story is her little dog (who seems to have no name). The book is strongest in the final two chapters - Chapters from A Dog's Life and Block Party. I smiled hard and cried harder through the final movements between Nina and her dog. We are all witnesses to their ceremony... |
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The Society of Friends: Stories by Kelly Cherry (Paperback - Sept. 1999)
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