Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Late Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Mr. Dixon wields a stubbornly plain-spoken style; he loves all sorts of tricky narrative effects. And he loves even more the tribulations of the fantasizing mind, ticklish in their comedy, alarming in their immediacy."—The New York Times

The interlinked tales in this Late Stories detail the excursions of an aging narrator navigating the amorphous landscape of grief in a series of tender and often waggishly elliptical digressions.

Described by Jonathan Lethem as "one of the great secret masters" of contemporary American literature, Stephen Dixon is at the height of his form in these uncanny and virtuoso fictions.

With Late Stories, master stylist Dixon returns with a collection exploring the elision of memory and reality in the wake of loss.

Stephen Dixon was born in 1936 in New York City. He is the author of more than thirty books, including Frog and Interstate, which were nominated for the National Book Award. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, the American Academy Institute of Arts and Letters Prize for Fiction, the O. Henry Award, and a Pushcart Prize.

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      Dixon's new collection explores the heart of an aging man's life.Why isn't Dixon a household name? The author of more than 30 novels and collections of short stories, he is regarded, when he is regarded, as a "writer's writer," which is about as backhanded as a compliment can get. Yet his writing, which is plainspoken and deceptively straightforward, is the sort that sticks with you, because it cuts to the uncertainty of life. His new collection is a case in point: 31 linked stories about a writer named Philip Seidel, who is wrestling with the depredations of age. Seidel's chronology and Dixon's overlap--both live and work in Baltimore (Dixon taught writing at Johns Hopkins for many years) and both are recently widowed (Dixon's wife, the poet and translator Anne Frydman, died of complications from multiple sclerosis in 2009). But don't let that confuse you into thinking these efforts are thinly veiled autobiography. Rather, they offer moment-by-moment deep dives into longing and despair and forgetfulness, memory and fantasy. In the opening story, "Wife in Reverse," Dixon traces the dynamic of a marriage in a page and a half, beginning with the death of the protagonist's spouse and ending with their first meeting three decades before. In the second, he imagines the paralyzing loss of an adult child. What he is evoking is possibility, conditionality, the sense that everything could change, or fall apart, in any given instant. That this is the essence of fiction goes without saying; it has been the impetus behind Dixon's project all along. And yet, in this stirring and heartfelt book, Dixon goes beyond loss into the kind of preservation that only literature can provide. That's not to say his stories traffic in illusion; perhaps projection is a better word. "Remember" delineates, in excruciating detail, the slow forgetting of its aging protagonist ("He feels his fly. It's open; forgot again. Makes him even more worried about himself"), while the stunning "Just What Is" and "Just What Is Not" investigate two sides of an affair that never was, highlighting the tension between inner and outer life. In the end, nothing happens, although, of course, everything does. Or, as Dixon observes in the transcendent "Missing Out," which imagines an alternate life in which Seidel never met the wife who has left him widowed: "Nothing. I told you. It was all in my head. Was I in dreamland? You bet. Not that she would have been interested in me." Dixon is a master of the minor moments, the dreams and the disappointments, that transfigure every one of us. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from August 1, 2016
      Dixon's new collection explores the heart of an aging man's life.Why isnt Dixon a household name? The author of more than 30 novels and collections of short stories, he is regarded, when he is regarded, as a writers writer, which is about as backhanded as a compliment can get. Yet his writing, which is plainspoken and deceptively straightforward, is the sort that sticks with you, because it cuts to the uncertainty of life. His new collection is a case in point: 31 linked stories about a writer named Philip Seidel, who is wrestling with the depredations of age. Seidels chronology and Dixons overlapboth live and work in Baltimore (Dixon taught writing at Johns Hopkins for many years) and both are recently widowed (Dixons wife, the poet and translator Anne Frydman, died of complications from multiple sclerosis in 2009). But dont let that confuse you into thinking these efforts are thinly veiled autobiography. Rather, they offer moment-by-moment deep dives into longing and despair and forgetfulness, memory and fantasy. In the opening story, Wife in Reverse, Dixon traces the dynamic of a marriage in a page and a half, beginning with the death of the protagonists spouse and ending with their first meeting three decades before. In the second, he imagines the paralyzing loss of an adult child. What he is evoking is possibility, conditionality, the sense that everything could change, or fall apart, in any given instant. That this is the essence of fiction goes without saying; it has been the impetus behind Dixons project all along. And yet, in this stirring and heartfelt book, Dixon goes beyond loss into the kind of preservation that only literature can provide. Thats not to say his stories traffic in illusion; perhaps projection is a better word. Remember delineates, in excruciating detail, the slow forgetting of its aging protagonist (He feels his fly. Its open; forgot again. Makes him even more worried about himself), while the stunning Just What Is and Just What Is Not investigate two sides of an affair that never was, highlighting the tension between inner and outer life. In the end, nothing happens, although, of course, everything does. Or, as Dixon observes in the transcendent Missing Out, which imagines an alternate life in which Seidel never met the wife who has left him widowed: Nothing. I told you. It was all in my head. Was I in dreamland? You bet. Not that she would have been interested in me. Dixon is a master of the minor moments, the dreams and the disappointments, that transfigure every one of us.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading