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Taller Women: A Cautionary Tale [Paperback]

Lawrence Naumoff (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 12, 1994
The story of an emergency-room physician who likes to save women but loses interest when they become strong. Naumoff focuses on a world where women seem taller than they used to be, men seem to be falling short, and life seems stranger. Harvest American Writing series

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The controlling image of Naumoff's ( Rootie Kazootie ) compellingly radiant metafiction about male-female relationships is the gridlock pattern of life. To survive, everyone in this indeterminate future time must learn to "breathe differently, in short, hard gasps . . . to draw in all they would need." Monroe Hopkins, a 40-something emergency-room doctor in a North Carolina hospital, thinks he knows what's wrong with modern women--they've gotten taller. Taller women are happier women who don't need men. His first wife, Katy, was "too tall," so they divorced. He lives with Lydia, but she's getting taller, too; he's looking for a shorter woman and thinks he's found one in 18-year-old neighbor Ronnie, who wants to move west and be a cowgirl. Other couples trapped in the same universe include Martha and Bob: she leaves him for ex-con Earl. They open a bar and hire an "old-fashioned knife-throwing act," a husband hurling knives at his wife, tied to a revolving wheel (another of the book's vibrant metaphors). Caught in her own cycle of abuse, Martha sees this as "just an act," even after Earl's buddies rape her and hang her from a balcony by her hair. In high fabulist manner Naumoff explores the male predilection for "the ritualization of control" of women. Some women (such as Monroe's first wife Katy) learn to say "no" in their search for freedom and self-control, for an "unwrinkled expanse of order, and renewal, and faith." Others (like his new love Ronnie) head out for the Rogers/Evans "happy trails." The novel is a scathing indictment of the way things were "back then," i.e., now, a warning written in dazzling dialogue and enthralling prose variously reminiscent of Pinter, Beckett, Robert Coover and Nathanael West.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Kirkus Reviews

What do men want? The upper hand, as always, according to this offbeat, darkly comic novel about relationships, Naumoff's third (following Rootie Kazootie, 1990). Monroe is a 40-ish emergency-room doctor somewhere in North Carolina. Once he was a needy kid from a broken home; then he married the incomparable Katy, soaking up everything this generous woman had to offer until his possessiveness ended their idyll. Since their breakup, Monroe has turned into a compassionate knight, rescuing women like Lydia, a clerical worker at his hospital, demoralized after two failed marriages to ``crude, hard-drinking'' guys. But there's a catch to Monroe's chivalry, as Lydia (living with him at the start of the novel) is finding out: As she regains her assertiveness, Monroe's interest fades. ``They like us weak. I swear they do,'' she tells her friend Martha, just ending a long marriage to chauvinist Bob, who asks Monroe, ``Haven't you ever been mad enough to hit a woman?'' The doctor's been tempted, sure, but seeing the results of domestic violence, close up, every day, has powerfully reinforced Monroe's basic decency; besides, he has a new rescue mission. His neighbors' 18-year-old daughter Ronnie is begging for help, and Monroe fancies the idea of this wild, sensual, unhappy teenager as his infinitely malleable ``little gal.'' They will start a new life in California; he sneaks her out of town, having turned Lydia loose and patched up his last ER patient, poor Martha, who had fared even worse with her new beau, an ex-con, than with Bob; his buddies had tied her to the balcony by her hair after she had obligingly pleasured them. ``Wantonness in women would always be punished.'' So says the authorial voice, which becomes damagingly intrusive, the tail wagging the dog, as this underplotted novel progresses and its characters flatten out into case-histories; the best stuff is in the lighter, more playful first half. -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Mariner Books (January 12, 1994)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0156881624
  • ISBN-13: 978-0156881623
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,960,386 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Lawrence Naumoff is a novelist and teacher in the Creative Writing Program at the University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill. He is the winner of a Whiting Award, a Thomas Wolfe award and many other literary prizes. His novel, Taller Women, a cautionary tale, was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year in 1992.
A collection of short stories is his latest. It is titled: The Cashmere Sweater and Other Stories. It is the author's first book that is about childhood. All the main characters are children. It's set in the 50s, in the Myers Park section of Charlotte, and Leslie, the central character, is growing up in the neighborhood of, and in the schools, of the mostly entirely WASP and old South families, where he does not quite fit in.
A recent book, also, is: The Longest Mobile Home in the Blue Ridge Mountains. It's purely humor, and the main character is straight out of a mountain folk tale, though the telling of this story is intentionally exaggerated, bordering on parody.
Published prior to The Longest Mobile Home..., was A Southern Tragedy, in Crimson and Yellow, is about the Hamlet, North Carolina chicken plant fire of 1991. The fire exits had been locked by the owners to keep the workers from stealing. 26 workers died, and the tragedy captured the attention of the media as well as everyday citizens. A well-known photograph was taken of a set of kicked, soot smudged footprints on the inside of a fire exit door. The novel won the 2005 Sir Walter Raleigh Award for "the best work of fiction by a North Carolina author." Besides a trade paperback edition, it's also on Kindle.
His other books are listed below, and some excerpts of reviews are also included.

U.S. publications:
The Night of the Weeping Woman, 1988, Morgan Entrekin/Atlantic Monthly Press.
Rootie Kazootie, 1990, Farrar Straus and Giroux.
Taller Women, a cautionary tale, 1992, Harcourt Brace.
Silk Hope, 1994, Harcourt Brace.
A Plan for Women, 1997, Harcourt Brace.
A Southern Tragedy, in Crimson and Yellow, 2005, Zuckerman Cannon/Blair, now a Kindle Book.

Foreign publications:

The Night of the Weeping Women, Rootie Kazootie and Taller Women by Collins Publishers, England.
De Nacht van de Huilende Vrouwen, and, Hoed u Voor Langere Vrouwen, published by De Arbeiderespers, Amsterdam.
Mujeres Mas Altas, published by Seix Barral, Barcelona
Frauen Auf Der Uberhol-Spur, published by Econ Taschenbuch Verlag, Dusseldorf.
Dansa i Mansken, published by Wiken, Finland
The Night of the Weeping Women was bought by a Japanese publisher but never came out.

Film activity(that's been a trip...):

Film version of Silk Hope was a CBS Sunday Night Movie in 1999, starring Farrah Fawcett. This is one of the worst movies you would ever see. It is so lame. It's bound to end up as a joke movie at a Farrah Fawcett retrospective. (Summer, 09....Well,Farrah just died after a terrible couple of years with cancer...so, what I said about the film is still true, but now it's tragic, which makes it so I should rewrite what I said about her and the film, but I'll leave it, as true, all the while being sorry about her death.)

Rootie Kazootie was optioned for years and is currently owned, as far as I know, outright, by the actress Diane Lane. It was optioned for years, before that, by Alphonso and Carlos Cuaron, who wrote a screenplay of the book. They did Children of Men, and other really terrific films. I wish something would happen with that.

The Night of the Weeping Women was optioned for 7 years by well-known casting agent, Mindy Marin of Blue Water Ranch Entertainment. She paid me to write a script, it didn't go anywhere, she paid someone else to work on that script, nothing happened. It's not optioned now, as far as I know.

Awards:

The 2005 Sir Walter Raleigh Award for the novel A Southern Tragedy, in Crimson and Yellow. This prize, given by the N.C. Literary and Historical Society, is presented for "the best work of fiction by a N.C. author," each year.
Winner of Whiting Writer's Award, a Thomas Wolfe Memorial Award, a National Endowment for the Arts Discovery Award, Carolina Quarterly Prize, and other prizes.
Short stories and essays appear in various publications and collections(nothing special, but some okay stories here and there.)

Praise for some of Lawrence Naumoff's books:

Rootie Kazootie(my most fun book, I guess)
"A brilliant comedy of errant romance....Plaintive, madcap, utterly seductive, Naumoff writes about marriage and faithlessness as if he were concocting an eighth Deadly Sin."
-The Washington Post

A Plan for Women(kind of too real I'm sometimes told, seriously literary, if you know what I mean...)
"A provocative novel...When Naumoff exercises his exacting sympathy, understanding and humor on the desperate moments of daily life, he brings such compassion to his characters that their struggles are heroically transformed."
-The New York Times Book Review

The Night of the Weeping Women(Funny sad fictionalized account of a family I was involved with for a number of years. More traditionally Southern than most of my books)
"(Naumoff) looks at marriage honestly. What he sees is outrageously--hilariously, tragically--undeniable; and he sets it all down with effortless-looking brilliance.
-Reynolds Price

Taller Women(about a wild-child raised-by-wolves type teenage girl who falls for a doctor who isn't exactly up to her free spiritness,)
"Taller Women is compellingly radiant meta-fiction about male-female relationships. A scathing indictment of the way things were 'back then', i.e., now. A warning written in dazzling prose variously reminiscent of Pinter, Beckett, Robert Coover and Nathanael West."
-Publishers Weekly

Silk Hope, NC(Two sister's one wild, one very traditional, I like this book a lot, it's funny and moves fast...made into a dreadful film, but, oh well...)
"The book is funny, sad and wise in all the right places."
-The News and Observer

A Southern Tragedy, in Crimson and Yellow(now also a Kindle book...about the Hamlet Chicken Plant fire...a little bit of social realism and very factual to the town and the event...needed to be written as one of the more important industrial/sociological/human condition things that happened in NC)
"With meticulous physical descriptions, Naumoff has written not just an historical novel, or a political one, or one of personal lives and tragedies, but all those things at once."
-Haven Kimmel

(Photo by Steve Exum)


 

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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A solid, quick read..., June 13, 2001
By 
Andria (St. Paul, MN United States) - See all my reviews
I read this crazy little book in two days. i just couldn't put it down. Naumoff is a great southern writer to get into. His characters, especially in this book, are so clear you can picture them well in your mind as you read through the story. More than once, my jaw dropped at some of the things these characters said or did. I've never experienced a character like Ronnie in anything I've read and doubt I will again. I won't give away any details but I will say this, if this were ever made into a film, I could see Kevin Spacey playing the character of Monroe. Read this book to see what I mean.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Hilarious and strange, June 10, 2000
By A Customer
This is a provocative, disturbing and hilarious book by a master of dialogue. Naumoff is not read as much as he should be.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A delightful, funny, charming tale about the battle between the sexes, December 4, 2010
This review is from: Taller Women: A Cautionary Tale (Paperback)
Occasionally a novel comes along that swallows you whole, making you sigh with pleasure, think deep thoughts, and blink with a delighted astonishment. Taller Women is just such a novel. Following hot on the heels of Naumoff's previous novel, Rootie Kazootie, it continues the theme of wise women, filled with hope and sadness, and near-silent men afraid of the truth in their hearts and the questions from their lovers.

In manic Lydia and whimsical Monroe, Naumoff portrays a tangled relationship that steers off the road into emotional territory for which neither has prepared. Like the shifting plates beneath the earth's surface, they bump and grind, facing mutual confusion and a hope for something better around the corner. With off-beat humour and genuine insight, Naumoff recognises the sad, funny, scary and absurd battles that occur between the sexes.

Marvellous.
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