This little gem opens the door on the life of writer Ray Carver, with photos commissioned by him and his longtime companion, Tess Gallagher, with the understanding that Ray didn't had little time left to live. As the poem "Gravy" tries to explain at the end of this book, each day was one more Ray was thankful for.
Without much window dressing, Ray described the ordinary lives of people struggling with alcoholism, each other, and the circumstances, usually, that come with not having money. Yet, a current of joy runs through this book. Ray was a student of John Gardner, one of my favorite authors, and his spare writing style shows some of Gardner's influence on editing a work. Carver Country contains episodes that illustrate this process that he and Tess adhered to, despite demonic cats and the rare pull of the past on their lives. In these times, the readers feels the love this couple encompassed. Having met Tess, it's clear to me what a gentle soul Ray was, what he became despite the ravages of his early and ongoing familial upheavals. Bob Adelman's photos add a dimension to this book that is not only unobtrusive, and not merely explanatory, but profound. His pictures do not make this a coffee table book, though it could be. What this book does best, at least for this reviewer, is to open a window on life's brief pageant. It sparks that dull coal inside to write.