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The Stories of Mary Gordon [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

Mary Gordon (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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This Book Is Bound with "Deckle Edge" Paper
You may have noticed that some of our books are identified as "deckle edge" in the title. Deckle edge books are bound with pages that are made to resemble handmade paper by applying a frayed texture to the edges. Deckle edge is an ornamental feature designed to set certain titles apart from books with machine-cut pages. See a larger image.

Book Description

October 3, 2006
The masterly stories of Mary Gordon return us to the pleasure of this writer’s craft and to her monumental talent as an observer of character and of the ever-fading American Dream. These pieces encompass the pre- and postwar Irish American family life she circles in the early Temporary Shelter series, as well as a wealth of new fiction that brings her contemporary characters into middle age; it is their turn to face bodily decline, mortality, and the more complex anxieties of modern life. Gordon captures the sharp scent of feelings as they shift, the shape of particular lives in their hope and incomprehensibility.

In “The Neighborhood,” a seven-year-old who has lost her father finds birthday parties, with their noisy games and spun-sugar roses on fancy cakes, her greatest trial. “City Life” explores the dark side of Manhattan apartment living. “Intertextuality” proposes a dream meeting between Proust’s characters and the author’s aging grandmother. Throughout, Gordon’s surprising path to the center of a story is as much a part of the tale as the self-understanding her characters achieve in the process: “What were they all, any of them, feeling?” one narrator ventures. “This was the sort of question no one in my family would ask. Feelings were for others: the weak, the idle. We were people who got on with things.”

With their powerful insights into how we make do, both socially and privately, these stories are a treasure of American fiction. Each is a joy to read and a chance to savor Gordon’s clear vision: her ability to reveal at every turn what we need and what we wish for, and her willingness, always, to address what comes of such precious wishes.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. This book collects 41 tough-minded explorations into human hope, loss and failings by the award-winning author of six novels (including 1978's Final Payments), a memoir and a life of Joan of Arc. Her quietly desperate protagonists range from a mother unable to leave her child alone at school (in "Separation") to a 74-year-old widow who revisits Italy in search of her youth, only to face her mortality ("Death in Naples"). "My Podiatrist Tells Me a Story About a Boy and a Dog," although lighter in tone than many of the entries, concludes with a devastating comment on female desire and later life. Characters are frequently silent, letting their yearnings speak louder than they, and many of the people who inhabit this collection want nothing but to be left alone, if only because it's all that remains to them. Themes of Catholicism, Irish-American families and women struggling with self-image and convoluted relationships concern the deftly delineated characters. Gordon is a master of nuance. Gripping and memorable, this collection, half of which is new or uncollected work, is a study in human connection and the lack of it. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* A refined woman conceals rage within her heart. An elegant mansion harbors wrack and ruin. Gordon is fascinated with deception and contradiction and, therefore, writes potent and stealthy short stories that carry within their holds incendiary stories-within-stories. In one of the 22 new and uncollected tales in this spectacular volume, a woman reading Proust is suddenly assailed by memories of her flinty grandmother. In "City Life," a tale of Poe-like intensity, a woman morbidly ashamed of her parents' catastrophic ineptness hides her past behind a veneer of perfect domesticity. "Death in Naples," Gordon's shivery twenty-first-century variation on the Thomas Mann masterpiece, is one of several understated and eviscerating stories that contrast today's loud, fast, and tawdry world with the more gracious and contemplative ambience of a lost, or perhaps fabled, time. Brilliantly structured and psychologically acute, Gordon's full-bodied and engrossing stories about stoic women test our assumptions about faith and sacrifice, family and home, shame and dread. Nineteen sharp-witted tales from Temporary Shelter (1987) follow, including one that reveals the source for Gordon's most recent novel, Pearl (2005). In all, this is a preeminent and pleasurable collection by a writer of significance and spirit. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 480 pages
  • Publisher: Pantheon (October 3, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375423168
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375423161
  • Product Dimensions: 6.5 x 1.6 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #965,506 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking, engrossing, and unforgettable, October 27, 2006
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Stories of Mary Gordon (Hardcover)
Reading this hefty book of short stories that explores the traits and lives of everyday people is enough to wallop a reader in the gut. The tales are all too real. The characters are never seen through a kind pink haze; without softening, they show us --- in unflinching prose --- jealousy, possessiveness, despair, loss and more. And yet we cannot look away; Mary Gordon is describing us.

One theme running through the collection is the notion that the past is never truly gone. The first story, "City Life," brings us Beatrice, whose marriage to Peter is founded on the lie that her parents are dead and her upbringing was normal. In fact, Beatrice has no idea if her alcoholic parents in their filthy hopeless home are still alive. Her life with Peter and her children is disrupted when they move from their restored farmhouse in the country into a New York City apartment. Beatrice meets her past there, and she can no longer deny its power over her life.

The underbelly of love is another premise in many tales, such as "Separation," in which a mother struggles with society's expectation that her young child should bond with others besides herself. The author poses a question: How powerful is the force of maternal possessiveness? In this chilling piece, we see the extreme, which is strong enough to warp lives.

The world constantly changes, as does our place in it. In "Death in Naples," a family jaunt to Naples leaves an elderly widow searching for both her own autonomy and landmarks of her past happy travels with her late husband. Her quest leaves her lost in a world in which she feels misplaced.

Catholicism is the underpinning of many of these stories. In "The Deacon," a nun, Joan Fitzgerald, encounters a trying spiritual challenge in the form of an inept teacher in the parish school in which Joan is principal. The teacher, Gerard, is the one person Joan feels she cannot stomach. Yet fate (or Gerard would say "God's will") pushes them together in a solitary meal during which Joan must make a difficult spiritual choice.

In "Bishop's House," Lavinia seeks solace at the home of elderly friends. Another guest, also recovering from an ended romance, tries the patience of everyone in the house. Lavinia discovers, in a double twist of revelation, that no one is as they appear.

Revenge is served in "Cleaning Up" --- but instead of being punishment for wrongdoing, it strives to chastise an unbearable act of charity. The multilayered story acknowledges the deeply hidden rationale of a seemingly irrational action.

In "Walt," the main character is stuck in a spider web where she considers the ultimate and unforgivable cruelty: her own, toward someone who loves her. The impulse to squelch him survives decades. She can't stop yet she can't live with her actions.

THE STORIES OF MARY GORDON is not a light read, jabbing sharp, unrelenting elbows into the reader and whispering, "Do you recognize yourself?" The following passage in this collection's "Storytelling" struck a chord with me. A new acquaintance is speaking to the main character, who is a writer:

"Are all your books depressing?" asked Jean-Claude.

"I think I write about life as it is."

The tales Mary Gordon writes are about unadorned lives. While they are sometimes bleak, they are also thought-provoking, engrossing and unforgettable, making THE STORIES OF MARY GORDON a challenging and rewarding read.

--- Reviewed by Terry Miller Shannon
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning short stories, November 9, 2007
By 
Reviewed by Shawn Remfrey

This engrossing collection of tales is a must have for everyone's bookshelf. Each short story is exquisitely written and well-crafted with Mary Gordon's personal style. Whether the reader is wanting a quick entertaining story, or in-depth literature to study, Mary Gordon delivers.

Each story deals with the human condition; thoughts, emotions, actions and where each of those leads us. The most popular theme throughout the book is disillusionment. There are also tales of hopelessness, depression, alcoholism. My favorite two stories involve an elderly woman forced to see her favorite place through the eyes of her daughter in law, and a woman forced to look at her husband through her own eyes. These stories give each person a chance to examine his or her own life.

Mary Gordon's characters are alive and become dear. Vivid imagery helps lose oneself in a world that could easily belong to anyone else, too. In a space of five to ten pages, an entire story unfolds, leaving a sense of completion. Through one snippet of a character's life, the reader has a sense of that person's past, future and all that makes them up.

At first I was skeptical about Mary Gordon's talent, having never read anything written by her before. I quickly learned that you truly can't judge a book by it's cover. I was captivated from story to story. Each character, literally, made me identify and sympathize with them. This collection kept me in emotional turmoil until the end. I fully intend to search for every Mary Gordon book I am able to find and spread the word about this gem.

Mary Gordon comes from an interesting heritage mix of Jewish and Irish Catholic. Most of her stories reflect her upbringing. She currently teaches composition and creative writing at a community college. Mary Gordon's most recent published book is Circling My Mother: A Memoir. This nonfiction book tells the story of her mother as Mary was growing up. In 1996 Mary Gordon wrote a similar book in her father's memory, The Shadow Man.

Armchair Interviews says: Wonderful to know about a first-rate book of short stories.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Carver ko'd in heavyweight title fight with Gordon, July 28, 2010
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An avid fan of the oft-maligned Short Story, I have for a long while held up Raymond Carver as the veritable 'yard-stick' against which all authors were measured. Whilst a good number of readers are lost by Carver's 'apparent' simplicity, those who unequivocally understand Carver's greatness are in no doubt that the Emperor is indeed clothed, clothed in sumptuous velvets, silks and satins. However, having such a narrow frame of reference means that almost everything one subsequently reads falls so terribly short of even hitting the board - never mind the target. That is until I encountered the greatness of Mary Gordon.

This anthology contains forty-one short stories amounting to sum four-hundred and fifty-seven pages, and is seamlessly divided into two collection; New & Uncollected and those taken from Temporary Shelter. Among that substantial body of work there is nothing less than perfect storytelling. There is no padding, no filling and nothing slipped in to fulfil publishing obligations. What is presented here is carbon in its purest form; a diamond. So brittle, so transparent, so sharp and so hard that it illuminates in the purest way. It is cold, hard and aggressively competent, it is purity, it is perfect. It is almost too perfect because it raises the bar to such a level that from this point forth all that which is published and thus, quite rightly, held up in comparison will seem to have fallen SO short of the Ideal - that which is encapsulated here.

I think it would not be an over-statement to say that Gordon has now surpassed Carver and is the present undisputed heavyweight champion of the Short Story. Rest assured that such an accolade is not issued lightly and issued knowing full well that she is standing on Carver's shoulders.

Gordon's genius is unrelenting and this text demonstrates that with unquestioning clarity. By page seven I was fully aware of the immensity of that which I held in my hands and from that point forth she had her foot flat to the floor until the very last page. She did not let up, loose her concentration, loose her nerve, loose her focus, she remained authentic and in character until the final scene; the only slight deviation she took was with ' Writing Lesson'.

I would wholeheartedly recommend this book to any of the following:
i) Students of literature
ii) Short Story writers
iii) Teacher's of literature
iv) Anyone previously disillusioned by the Short Story
v) Anyone looking for a great read especially a holiday read.

I can't imagine how anyone would not be enthralled, amazed and somewhat humbled by the genius of Mary Gordon.
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Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Aunt Maddie, Jean Claude, Aunt Lena, John Taylor, The Deacon, Temporary Shelter, Uncle William, The Healing, City Life, Larry Casper, The Only Son of the Doctor, Out of the Fray, The Blind Spot, Aunt Bitsie, Last Year, Martine Lavin, Sonia Martinez, Miss Taub, Sister Trinitas, The Epiphany Branch, John Lavin, Long Island, Stanford White, Sister Berchmans
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Surprise Me!
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