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Falling in Love

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"At the door is an old lover, someone who broke your heart, who is in England on business and has tracked you down..." - From The Lone Pilgrim by Laurie Colwin

Romance is in the air, tempting the imagination. Stirring tales of love, longing and desire. A great gift for your loved ones!

Rick Bass's Fires

read by Ted Marcoux

In the Rockies a woman sets fire to a parched field to take the plunge into the pool of love.

Padgett Powell's The Winnowing of Mrs. Schuping

read by Christina Pickles

An eccentric southern dame cleans up her act and finds love.

Laurie Colwin's The Lone Pilgrim

read by Hope Davis

A New York artist longs for love and marital domesticity.

E. Nesbit's Melisande

read by Jane Curtin

A delicious fairy tale about a princess with a terrible curse.

Edna O'Brien's Violets

read by Fionnula Flanagan

A subtle portrait of a woman caught in an impossible affair.

Maile Meloy's Travis, B.

read by William Hurt

A Western love story between a lonesome cowboy and a city gal.

Selected Shorts is an award-winning, one-hour program featuring readings of classic and new short fiction, recorded live at New York's Symphony Space. One of the most popular series on the airwaves, this unique show is hosted by Isaiah Sheffer and produced for radio by Symphony Space and WNYC Radio.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from February 25, 2008
      According to these well-chosen stories, a “wondrous woman” is foxy, resilient, stubborn and a bit magical. In David Haynes's “Taking Miss Kezee to the Polls,” the title character is a fiery octogenarian with a flaming red wig to match. Michael Genet delivers Miss Kezee's sassy proclamations with aplomb and brilliantly renders the bewilderment and compassion of the good-hearted young man who has been delegated to chauffeur her around town. In Kim Edward's “The Story of My Life,” Holly Hunter is pitch-perfect as the spunky teenage daughter of an antiabortion activist, reclaiming her right to individual choices. Two of the stories involve a touch of magical realism. In Allan Gurganis's “It Had Wings,” a frail widow takes full advantage of an angel who falls into her yard. Marian Seldes performs the woman's narrative slowly and carefully as surely such a woman would address us. In contrast, Kathleen Chalfant takes us slowly but sensuously through a “humble bank clerk's lust for “The Red Fox Coat” she covets until she becomes one with it. This touching and hilarious collection of well-crafted tales is beautifully rendered by its performers.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 31, 2008
      Like life itself, these stories are more about the journey than the destination. Trains, planes and automobiles form the loose thematic center. Gellhorn's “Miami–New York,” read by Joanna Gleason, is a 50-minute tale of two strangers who find temporary intimacy on a long flight. Gleason brings out all the subtle interchanges between an army captain and a lonely wife. David Rakoff also does an admirable job with Thurber's “A Ride with Olympy,” which pairs two motorists with dubious driving and linguistic skills. But like an old car, the story is slow to reach full speed, and Rakoff's mouth-smacking noises are distracting. Sonia Manzano shows a wonderful talent for dialogue as she performs Edward P. Jones's touching story about a lonely single mother seeking companionship on “An Orange Line Train to Ballston.” In Dorothy Thomas's “The Getaway,” Mia Dillon captures the Midwestern accents of a woman and her ornery son. While the stories are a mixed bag, enough of them are good enough to be worth the ride.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 3, 2010
      Recorded live at Peter Norton Symphony Space in New York City and on tour around the U.S., this collection features works from a wide swath of genres and masters of the genre including Eudora Welty and Edgar Allan Poe and such inspired writer-reader pairings as John Cheever and Malachy McCourt. David Strathairn’s tone and pacing produce a standout rendition of Donald Barthelme’s “Game”; Christine Baranski delivers a chilling performance of the Joyce Carol Oates classic “Where Are You Going? Where Have You Been?” and Jerry Stiller’s hammy rendition of John Sayles’s “At the Anarchists’ Convention” brings down the house and is worth the price of the collection alone.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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