Recorded live at Peter Norton Symphony Space in New York City and at venues across the United States, these audio anthologies feature short stories from the Selected Shorts program that airs nationwide. More than 300,000 listeners tune in to this offering weekly to hear spellbinding tales read aloud by an assortment of terrific actors.
Strong female protagonists grace this collection of passionate stories dedicated to mothers, daughters, wives, and lovers. A woman splurges on an irresistible coat that becomes her and transforms her; a feisty teenager who has grown up as her activist mother’s poster-child realizes the strength of her own convictions; and a young peasant woman saved from drowning is suddenly drawn to her rescuer and hopeful about her life. Features stories including Kim Edwards' “The Story of My Life” read by Holly Hunter, Teolinda Gersào's “The Red Fox Fur Coat" translated by Margaret Jull Costa and read by Kathleen Chalfant, Allan Gurganus' "It Had Wings" read by Marian Seldes, David Haynes' "Taking Miss Kezee to the Polls" read by Michael Genet, D. H. Lawrence's “The Horse Dealer’s Daughter” read by Jon DeVries, and Richard Russo's "The Whore's Child" read by Harold Gould.
TEOLINDA GERSÃO nasceu em 1940, em Coimbra. Licenciada em Filologia Germânica e Doutorada em Literatura Alemã, com a tese Alfred Döblin: indíviduo e natureza (1976), pela Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Coimbra. Foi Assistente na Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa, Professora Catedrática da Faculdade de Ciências Sociais da Universidade Nova de Lisboa e Leitora de Português na Universidade de Berlim. Autora de vários trabalhos de crítica literária, recebeu duas vezes o prémio de ficção PEN Clube, atribuído ao seu livro de estreia, O Silêncio, em 1981, e ao romance O Cavalo de Sol, em 1989. Foi também galardoada com o Grande Prémio da Associação Portuguesa de Escritores em 1995 e, na Roménia, com o Prémio de Teatro Marele do Festival de Bucareste (adaptação da obra ao teatro) com o romance A Casa da Cabeça de Cavalo. Em maio de 2003, o seu livro Histórias de Ver e Andar foi galardoado com o Grande Prémio do Conto 2002 Camilo Castelo Branco, da Associação Portuguesa de Escritores. À edição inglesa de A árvore das palavras (The Word Tree, Dedalus, 2010) foi atribuído o Prémio de Tradução 2012. A ficção de Teolinda Gersão desenvolve, na escrita contemporânea, uma poética romanesca original, abrindo a narração, a que o respeito pelas categorias de espaço, tempo, personagens, intriga confere certa verosimilhança, a uma irradiação de sentidos que decorre de um metaforismo assumido de forma estrutural pela narrativa. Não que as personagens e as suas relações, os temas ou os seres se reduzam a um carácter alegórico: o que ressalta é que por detrás da "história" estão em conflito pulsões humanas universais, frequentemente centradas sobre a dinâmica dos opostos (homem/mulher, caos/cosmos, racionalidade/loucura, entre outros). A ilusão da transparência, obtida por uma ordem sintagmática nítida, pela simplicidade da frase, despojada de tudo o que é acessório, pela redução do número de personagens, pela simplificação da ação, confere, então, às suas narrativas o estatuto de uma escrita mítica, cujo objetivo não é a representação, mas o conhecimento. Ao mesmo tempo, cada uma das suas narrativas, desenvolvendo até à exaustão algumas metáforas centrais (o cavalo, o teclado, etc.), desfibra todo o tipo de alienação social e mental subjacente à rutura dos princípios de harmonia invisível e de unidade íntima do homem com o universo. Como a pianista (e a romancista) de Os Teclados, Teolinda Gersão, diante de um "mundo fragmentário" e "indiferente", onde "as pessoas não formavam comunidades e só havia valores de troca", um "mundo vazio", persiste em tentar desvendar enigmas, como se a escrita e a exigência de rigor fossem "a transcendência que restava": "Aceitar o nada, o mundo vazio. E apesar disso, pensou levantando-se e sentando-se no banco - apesar disso sentar-se e tocar."
Teolinda Gersão's "The Red Fox Fur Coat" - A woman splurges on an irresistible coat that "becomes" her. (2 stars)
Kim Edwards' "The Story of My Life" - A teenager who has grown up as her activist mother's poster-child realizes the strength of her own convictions. (2 stars)
Allan Gurganus' "It Had Wings" - An angel lands in a widow's backyard. (2 stars)
Richard Russo's "The Whore's Child" - A nun's unusual life story becomes the focus of the writing class she signs up for. (5 stars)
David Haynes' "Taking Miss Kezee to the Polls" - A young Election Day volunteer gets more than he bargained for when he drives a feisty old voter to the polls. (4 stars)
D.H. Lawrence's "The Horse Dealer's Daughther" - A young peasant woman saved from drowning is suddenly drawn to her rescuer, hopeful about her life. (4 stars)
Las historias son buenas (alguna un poco floja). La lectura de esta recopilación se hizo con público, lo que supone no solo aplausos, al final o no de cada relato sino carcajadas durante toda la velada. Molesta MUCHO. Por desgracia es el único formato disponible en Scribd, así que se queda con tres estrellas y quizás estoy siendo generosa.
This is a recording of six stories, by different authors, each with a different reader.
The good: The stories are interesting. My favorite was "The Whore's Child", by Richard Russo. This is part of a long running series of performances in Symphony Space, NYC, that is broadcast on NPR. Many of these collections are available by download from the New York or Brooklyn Public Libraries.
The bad: They are performed in Symphony Space, for a live audience that bursts out laughing at even the lamest bit of humor. This interrupts the flow of the stories. Better recording methods would help.
Bottom line: I’ll be listening to more of these collections.
I loved this audiobook. The readers were great and the stories really held my interest. A few of them I even back tracked to hear segments again. This is a great series.
A terrific listen. The last was my least favorite. I felt the theme was fitting for women's history month and then realized half or more of the authors were men. No offense to men.
I want to listen to more from this audio series. The quality was really good, both of readers and stories chosen. except the D.H. Lawrence story- that was just okay.
Really enjoyed these short stories.. All different authors & readers. Especially liked Holly Hunter's reading of The Story of My Life. An evangelist's daughter realizes her own destiny... apart from her mother's grasp. Also loved Allan Gorganus’ story about an angel falling to the ground in a widow’s back yard. She gives him warm milk... ! ’Taking Miss Kezee to the Polls’ is unforgettable.
"I know I'm leaving everything behind, my mother and Sam, my whole life, until this day. But it was not really my life. I know that. It was always just the reflections of the lives of other people."
Like all anthologies, some stories were better than others. I loved the narration of Taking Miss Keezee to the Polls. I would listen to anything he narrates.
A three CD set of short stories. The best one was "The Whore's Child" about an elderly nun who enrolls in a fiction writing class at a local university and tells the story of growing up in a convent. Another story is read by Holly Hunter (cannot remember the name). It is about a teenage girl who is the daughter of an anti-abortion preacher.
I listened to this when I was driving to NB from NS. It was nice to listen to short stories instead of a novel. I would recommend it to listen to on a long drive.