For more than twenty-five years, Ann Beattie's short fiction has held a mirror up to America, portraying its awkwardly welded families, its loosely coupled couples, and much-uprooted children with acuity, humor, and compassion. This triumphant collection includes thirty-six of the finest stories of her career including eight new pieces that have not appeared in a book before. Beattie's characters embark on stoned cross-country odysseys with lovers who may leave them before the engine cools. They comfort each other amid the ashes of failed relationships and in hospital waiting rooms. They try to locate themselves in a world where all the old landmarks have been turned into theme parks. Funny and sorrowful, fiercely compressed yet emotionally expansive, Park City is dazzling.
Ann Beattie (born September 8, 1947) is an American short story writer and novelist. She has received an award for excellence from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters and a PEN/Bernard Malamud Award for excellence in the short story form. Her work has been compared to that of Alice Adams, J.D. Salinger, John Cheever, and John Updike. She holds an undergraduate degree from American University and a masters degree from the University of Connecticut.
به نوئل گفتم :" ولی اخه عاشقت نیستم. نمی خوای با کسی زندگی کنی که عاشقت باشه؟" نوئل جواب داد:" هیچکی تا حالا عاشقم نبوده ، هیچکی ام نمیشه. چی رو میخوام از دست بدم؟" ص 154 ورمونت
This is a collection worth investing in. I too return to these stories. All of them are so dense and satisfying. There is always something going on in the subtext making them like puzzles to figure out. Although the material can be dark, the experience of reading this book is enjoyable. Very lovely.
I do not know if short stories are always for me... it took me actually forever to finish this and I think it was partly because reading a collection of short stories rather than a cohesive novel is Not always my vibe. Individually, I really enjoyed many of the stories in this collection! And I really admire Beattie's writing style and her ability to create such vivid scenes within her short stories. I think sometimes it was hard for me to connect to the stories because 1. the characters are older and 2. they were all written in the late 20th century. None of them felt SUPER dated (except one that was kind of umm... poorly aged), but def different scenarios than 21st century life. I am glad to be DONE with this so I can start reading novels again.
It seems like modern literary writers tend to congregate for the most part around university campuses and New York City. Their works are admired by the publishers of New Yorker, and perhaps in such magazines, that's where their work belongs. There isn't a whole lot to like about Ann Beattie's work. It's passable. It's mediocre. Nothing is really at stake because for the most part, the participants in her stories live a fairly comfortable life where the worst problems can potentially be resolved by a good psychiatrist and a pill or two.
Of the new stories, "Cosmos" and "Park City" are just phenomenal. The selected stories are also super well-chosen, and include some of my favorite Beattie stories, like "The Burning House" and "Windy Day at the Reservoir."
"خواب گرگ" نوشته آن بیتی، یک مجموعه داستان کوتاه برجسته است که با ظرافت و عمق به موضوعات روابط انسانی، تنهایی و جستجو برای معنا میپردازد. بیتی با نگاه تیزبین و نثری مینیمالیستی، دنیایی را خلق میکند که در آن شخصیتها با احساساتی پیچیده و گاه متناقض دست و پنجه نرم میکنند. داستان حول شخصیتهایی میگردد که دروننگریهایشان به همان اندازه که روشنکننده است، تاریک و انعکاسدهندهی دنیای درونی آنهاست. "خواب گرگ" با مهارتی بینظیر توانسته است لحظاتی از توقف و تفکر در زندگی روزمره را که خوانندگان ممکن است به راحتی نادیده بگیرند، به تصویر بکشد و آنها را به فکر فرو ببرد. این اثر همچون یک نقاشی آبمرکبی است که با جزئیات ظریفش، حسی از عدم قطعیت و در عین حال زنده بودن را منتقل میکند، و خواننده را دعوت میکند تا درون لایههای پیچیده زمان و تجربه انسانی کاوش کند.
Overall, this is a strong collection. Perhaps it’s best for studying Beattie. Some are dynamite, others I had to keep flipping back and forth to keep all the details straight, and some I ended up tuning out. There are some that are maybe similar enough to others that I would have just omitted them from the book and made it a little less unwieldy as a whole. Just me though probably on that.
I enjoyed the short stories but some of these stories were so frustrating because the characters were difficult to like (not all but most) but if an author is making you feel that she’s doing something right in her writing. So I recommend this book if you want to take a break from novels and read some fast paced interesting short stories.
داستان هایی با سبکب کاملن واقعی از زندگی آدم هایی با زندگی کاملن معمول-شبیه همه آدمهای دیگر .آنها نیزمرسض میشوند طلاق میگیرند عاشق میشوند و ... منتها این برش داستانی زندگی آنهاست که این کتاب را خواندنی میکند.
New stories: Cosmos-- Second question-- *Going home with Uccello-- The Siamese twins go snorkeling-- Zalla-- Ed and Dave visit the city-- The four-night fight-- *Park City --
from Distortions (1975): Vermont-- Wolf dreams-- *Dwarf house-- Snakes' shoes -- *** It's just another day in Big Bear, California --3
from Secrets and surprises (1978): Secrets and surprises-- Weekend--3 A vintage Thunderbird--2 *Shifting-- The lawn party-- Colorado --
from The Burning House (1982): Learning to fall-- *The Cinderella waltz-- *Jacklighting-- Waiting-- Desire-- Greenwich time-- *The burning house -- *** *Winter 1978 --
from Where You'll Find Me (1986): Janus--3 In the white night--3 Heaven on a summer night-- Summer people-- Skeletons-- Where you'll find me -- *** Snow --2
from What Was Mine (1991): The working girl-- *In Amalfi-- What was mine-- *Windy day at the reservoir-- Imagine a day at the end of your life-- *** Honey--2
*** from Perfect Recall (2001): *The big-breasted pilgrim--
from Follies (2005): *That last odd day in L.A.--
from The Accomplished Guest (2017): *The Indian uprising-- *Anecdotes--
This collection of 38 stories, eight of them new, is sort of my Midnight Cowboy in print: dark, elucidating, sad, sorry, wry, gloriously detailed, ironic, and timeless, despite the fact that I'm older and can fully "relate" to time and character and quandary. When Beattie hits it hard - and most of these stories do resonate - I found myself remembering what I'd read already and how her parents and lovers and children inhabit a far reach in my mind. Beattie is a consummate writer, I think, when she's hitting hard and I again find that her stories are full of edges that catch a reader when least aware. And then they resonate. Small things matter. So do big things. So does Beattie. I liked the grouping - Park City, Distortions, Secrets and Surprises, The Burning House, Where You'll Find Me and What Was Mine. The last story, "Imagine a Day at the End of Your Life," felt so present that I thought I'd found my feet in the ground, surrounded by leaves and sky and sun.
I had never read anything by Ann Beattie before this book and my decision to pick it up was brought about by an interview I read with her in The Paris Review. She really intrigued me as a writer; however I'm not sure this was the best book to begin with. One of the cover blurbs compared it to a Miles Davis boxed set and I think that's appropriate, both in terms of scope and breadth as well as not a great way to get introduced to a writer or a musician. The book contained selections from many of her previous collections and like a boxed set, as soon as I got the feel for what that collection was like it was off the next and the next. The stories themselves were great and she truly is an amazing writer, but being new to her work I may have missed the full impact of each individual book or 'album' as it were.
Beattie is a literary giant! This book pulls together her best stories from countless collections. Beattie helped redefine the short story, along with Ray Carver, Mary Robison, and Amy Hempel. These are stories about mostly well to do New Yorkers struggling to define their relationships to friends and family.
Beattie did a lot for the gay community in writing such monuments as "The Burning House" and "The Cinderella Waltz". Side note: David Leavitt is known as the first writer to get a story whose central characters were gay into the New Yorker (1982). But really Beattie's "The Cinderalla Waltz", which I find to be the truly superior story, was published first (1979).
Possibly the best of minimalism I've encountered, aside from Raymond Carver. The most engaging part of Beattie's work is her rendering of place, which she carries out in this controlled, reigned-in prose. Her characters have embraced void, and make you believe completely that they have done so.
My favorite short story is about a blue bowl. It's one of the most beautifully written short stories I have ever read.
My first exposure to Ann Beattie's short stories. Real and sometimes raw slices of life. With the humor and pathos that comes with them. I read in order of release rather than the order in the collection. It seems you can sense the author's confidence growing with the years, so the newest in the collection have a brio that might be lacking in the earlier works.
I broke off my reading of this long, almost 500 page collection of short stories, several times to read other things, but I always wanted to go back and finish. I'm glad I did. They are wonderful, realistic, long enough to be affecting, well-crafted.
Interesting sweep of her trajectory as a short story writer. As a fan, I loved seeing the voice of the stories grow in confidence as the selections got more recent.
Beautiful collection! These are some of the best short stories written from the 1970s to the 1990s. A good collection for readers who want to fall in love with Ann Beattie.