From Publishers Weekly
Heavy on anomie, these 11 stories focus on a well-tended company town, allied to a huge American electronics firm, where tragedy and bizarre behavior keep erupting in aimless but outwardly orderly lives. In "Brilliant House," a retired circuit-maker devises an elaborate lighting and electrical control system for his empty house after the death of his brain-dead daughter, whose life-support system he terminated. In "Lighter Than Air," a son's buoyant mood upon winning his church's balloon race is contrasted with the despair of his drunken, just-fired father. The book's most emotionally complex story, "Doe," concerns a battered African American widow who goes to live with the white ex-father-in-law she has never known. Two tales focus on an unfinished nuclear power plant--one on the workers who have been building it, another on the protesters who shut it down. Chicago-born Amidon, whose novel Splitting the Atom was published in England, is a financial writer in London, where he lives. In his U.S. debut, he takes the fitful pulse of those living the American Dream, incisively exploring empty nests, noncommunication between spouses, as is, seems to say 'noncommunication between ... empty nests' alienated youth and a pervasive corporate mentality.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
This slim volume is easily the very finest collection of short stories to appear this year. Stephen Amidon presents us with a written art form which is truly amazing.
--New England Review of BooksStephen Amidon's memorable first collection of stories conjures up images of Winnesburg, Ohio--but updated for the brave new world on suburban purgatory and numbed by a soundtrack that ranges from Muzak to punk rock
--New York Times Book ReviewIf Subdivision is just the beginning of Stephen Amidon's output, we may be in for some fireworks.
--Joseph O'Neill,The Literary Review.Stephen Amidon's subdivision defies cosy notions of community life and is distinctly short on American apple pie, but it is rich in humanity. It may be a hard place to love, but it is an easy one to believe in.
