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Don't Tell Anyone

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Domestic life, in Frederick Busch's 17 elegant stories, is like a cracked windshield: one tiny ping of gravel can, in time, fissure the whole thing. In "Machias," a man remembers the exact moment his marriage ruptured; he and his urbane wife were listening to an old curmudgeon, and each came away with an utterly different understanding of the tale, and the man. "I think it possible, as I look back when I dare, that our conversation in the shabby, lantern-lit dining room of the old man's house in Machias was the largest moment of my life. It went on. It is going on." Busch's characters can't help but spill their secrets, and they're pretty grumpy about it. In the ironically titled "The Talking Cure," a young boy works for a veterinarian who happens to be having an affair with his mother. The boy concludes, simply, "It's a story I try not to tell."

Don't Tell Anyone closes with "A Handbook for Spies." This long novella follows the life of a young, and then not-so-young, man whose parents escaped the Nazis in 1930s Paris. He is a professor in love with a married woman (a girl, really) who becomes a repository for his angst. With its dead-on campus milieu, its guilt-ridden sex, its inescapable ghosts of the past, it closely recalls Busch's 1997 masterpiece, Girls. And here, too, Busch comes as near as he ever does to delivering a manifesto on love: "Truly, he thought on one of his icy drives, Kafka is the patron saint of families. He had impressed a woman in graduate school with this observation. She had dated him, and it was not impossible, he thought, that Franz Kafka, snug as a bug in a bed, was the reason. To love, Kafka taught, was to be suspicious of what you must pay for the love." There exists no finer summing-up of Busch's own writing. --Claire Dederer

First published January 1, 2000

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About the author

Frederick Busch

70 books42 followers
Frederick Busch (1941–2006) was the recipient of many honors, including an American Academy of Arts and Letters Fiction Award, a National Jewish Book Award, and the PEN/Malamud Award. The prolific author of sixteen novels and six collections of short stories, Busch is renowned for his writing’s emotional nuance and minimal, plainspoken style. A native of Brooklyn, New York, he lived most of his life in upstate New York, where he worked for forty years as a professor at Colgate University.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Jill.
231 reviews
December 30, 2007
This is a book of short stories and I actually gave up about half-way through the book. The stories were odd and I just never got into it.
Profile Image for Patrick Barry.
1,126 reviews12 followers
September 12, 2018
Another solid short story collection from Frederick Busch. Busch's stories are always well-written. Set again primarily in Upstate New York, the stories are of love's difficulties. Sort of a pessimistic bunch, but it holds the reader's attention. I liked his earlier collection, "Absent Friends" better, but this is a solid lot.
Profile Image for Dora.
432 reviews7 followers
Want to read
January 17, 2008
Recommended by eleanorigby.
Profile Image for Melissa Larkin.
11 reviews
November 11, 2011
Ugh, I thought this book to be rather painful to read. I'm all for short stories, but just didn't like the flow of them, I somtimes found the author to rattle on on just absolute nonesense. Ick...
Profile Image for Sgilbert.
269 reviews1 follower
July 25, 2013
These stories were just too depressing for me. Could not get into them at all.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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