Greg Downs has been the least successful high school varsity basketball coach in Tennessee, the editor of a muckraking weekly newspaper on Chicago's South Side, a karaoke performer profiled in the "Boston Phoenix," and a reporter on the tail of a fugitive cult leader. A graduate of Yale University and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, he is an assistant professor of history at the City College of New York. Downs's stories have appeared in such publications as "Glimmer Train," "Meridian," "Chicago Reader," and "Sycamore Review."
Wow. What a great first book. It's no surprise Greg won the Flannery O'Connor award for short fiction. While it's been a number of years since I last read a Flannery O'Connor story, Downs's writing reminds me exactly of O'Connor at at her best.
Greg has an amazing ability to create characters that are interesting and that you care about. And he does it with just a few pages; some best selling authors can't do with 300+ page novels.
The stories are not mysteries but they suspenseful. I greatly enjoyed the journeys to see where they would end up. Many wind up being set in or around rural Kentucky, further giving an O'Connor feel to the stories.
His prose is clean and eminently readable, like Vonnegut at his best.
Only one story, Field Trip, fell flat for me. If you find yourself bored with Field Trip, you can skip to the next story, you won't miss anything. As for the other stories, they are all winners.
After years (sometimes decades) of owning them, I am liberating most of our books after I read them. But not this one. This one is a keeper. I'm sure many of the stories will linger in my memory like some of Flannery O'Connor's despite me not have read an O'Connor story in over a decade.
Wow. What a great first book. It's no surprise Greg won the Flannery O'Connor award for short fiction. While it's been a number of years since I last read a Flannery O'Connor story, Downs's writing reminds me exactly of O'Connor at at her best.
Greg has an amazing ability to create characters that are interesting and that you care about. And he does it with just a few pages; some best selling authors can't do with 300+ page novels.
The stories are not mysteries but they suspenseful. I greatly enjoyed the journeys to see where they would end up. Many wind up being set in or around rural Kentucky, further giving an O'Connor feel to the stories.
His prose is clean and eminently readable, like Vonnegut at his best.
Only one story, Field Trip, fell flat for me. If you find yourself bored with Field Trip, you can skip to the next story, you won't miss anything. As for the other stories, they are all winners.
After years (sometimes decades) of owning them, I am liberating most of our books after I read them. But not this one. This one is a keeper. I'm sure many of the stories will linger in my memory like some of Flannery O'Connor's despite me not have read an O'Connor story in over a decade.
This Flannery O'Connor Award winning collection is well-crafted, full of traditional literary fiction horsepower--metaphors, symbolism, allegory--plus it artistically renders and comments on racial themes while only occasionally slipping into a moralistic point of view. It's the kind of collection that I know I'm supposed to like, and although I can admire much of the literary technique employed, the stories just didn't resonate or excite enough to make me a raving fan. Maybe the techniques are too obviously on display and that's what kept pushing me out of the story, made me shift from reader to analyzer. I'll keep it the stack for some work I'm doing on short story theory and may add some commentary to this review later.
. This is a short story collection. The stories are told almost entirely in scene. There are a mix of narrators: 1st, 3rd limited, 3rd omniscient. Topics vary, but often concern racial issues, especially mixed marriages or lovers. Lots of dysfunctional characters and relationships. I saw flaws, but it’s basically good writing. I’m not sure I’d read it again.
I'm glad I got this one from the library because I'd be mad if I paid for it :). The stories weren't "bad" but I just didn't find too much that resonated with me. There are only instances in certain stories that I remember rather than the entire stories. I give it a big Meh...
Interesting, never have been so hot with short stories but these are unlike anything I've ever read before. I don't know if I like it. However I love the cover and the chapter title fonts.