Willow Temple : new & selected stories
(2004)

Fiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2004
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9780547595634 (electronic bk.) MWT14241591, 0547595638 (electronic bk.) 14241591
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

A collection of stories by the former US poet laureate, "a first-rate work by an author whose control over the tools of his genre is impeccable" (Publishers Weekly). A contemplative selection of twelve short stories from the celebrated author Donald Hall, Willow Temple focuses on the effects of divorce, adultery, and neglect. Hall's stories are reminiscent of those of Alice Munro and William Maxwell in their mastery of form and their ability to trace the emotional fault lines connecting generations. "From Willow Temple" is the indelible story of a child's witness of her mother's adultery and the loss that underlies it. Three stories present David Bardo at crucial junctures of his life, beginning as a child drawn to his parents' "cozy adult coven of drunks" and growing into a young man whose intense first affair undergirds a lifelong taste for ardor and betrayal. In this superbly perceptive collection, Hall gives memorable accounts of the passionate weight of lives. "[Hall possesses] a consistent gift for delicate description." -The New York Times Book Review "Hall is comfortable with small stages-a tavern, a summer music camp, a farm, an artist's studio, a junior college classroom, a cemetery, a bakery. But the quiet dramas that boil up in such places . . . are never small." -Chicago Tribune "Understated lyricism very much in what William Carlos Williams (whom Hall often resembles) called the 'American grain.' Moving and memorable." -Kirkus Reviews "A writer who attains the same high level of the game in poetry, fiction, and nonfiction." -The Boston Globe "[Willow Temple] attests to Hall's mastery as a storyteller, the prose lyrical and elegiac as he moving unfolds each character's frailties." -Ploughshares

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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