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Loading... Matters of Life and Deathby Bernard MacLaverty
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Any book of stories from Bernard MacLaverty is a cause for celebration, but Matters of Life and Death is more than that, as it is - without question - one of the finest contemporary examples of the short story as a genre. Beginning with the sudden, nauseating terror of a family caught up in an explosion of shocking sectarian violence and ending with the white-out of an Iowa blizzard and a different kind of fear, Matters of Life and Death is a book about bonds and connections, made and broken, secret and known. Vivid, beautifully controlled and written with effortless skill and empathy, these stories are object lessons in the art of short fiction. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction 1900- 1901-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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There's one haunting story that's really a novella called Up the Coast which recounts an episode in the life of a female artist whose desire to spend some time working alone on a remote Scottish coastline is painfully interrupted by a disturbed local, and the three page story, A Belfast Memory is worthy of Flannery O'Connor. But my favorite story was Visiting Takabuti that has an ending that reminded me of Salinger's A Perfect Day for Banafish. The beginning seems rather pedestrian but then slowly builds to an explosion. And in Takabuti the old Irish story is told of the soul that kissed the body where at the moment of death, "The soul leaves the body and tiptoes to the doorway, then turns and goes back to kiss the body that has sheltered it all these years."
Just a gorgeous little gem of a book