The Keillor Reader
Plain Thoughts on Fatherhood, Writing, Politics and Age
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نقد و بررسی
March 15, 2014
Melancholy and joy infuse Keillor's (O, What a Luxury: Verses Lyrical, Vulgar, Pathetic and Profound, 2013, etc.) latest collection. Heir to Mark Twain, James Thurber and E. B. White, Keillor offers more than laconic, sometimes-rueful, reports from the fictional Midwestern town of Lake Wobegon. Besides selected Prairie Home Companion monologues--written in an adrenaline rush on the morning of each show--this collection contains poetry, fiction and assorted essays, each introduced by autobiographical musings. A frequent subject is Keillor's childhood among the Sanctified Brethren, fundamentalists in Anoka, Minn., who "did not read novels or poetry and were wary of history, except what was in Scripture." Writing, they believed, was sinful; nevertheless, becoming a writer was Keillor's dream. In junior high school, he reported on sports for a local weekly; he worked his way through the University of Minnesota as an English major; and in 1969, he sold his first story to the New Yorker. A Prairie Home Companion began on the radio in 1974. "My bread and butter," he writes, "was the good people of Lake Wobegon, but writing about good people is an uphill climb. Their industriousness, their infernal humility, their schoolmarmish sincerity...their cliches falling like clockwork--they can be awfully tiring to be around." Those good people, however, have not been Keillor's only subjects. Here, he gives us an acerbic newspaper column about Americans who "shell out upward of $10 billion a year for health care for pets" but can't abide the thought "that everybody in America should receive the same level of care enjoyed by an elderly golden retriever." He lovingly recalls the urbane Paris Review editor George Plimpton. In "Home," "Cheerfulness" and "My Stroke (I'm Okay)," he celebrates the gifts of sharing your world with people you've known "almost forever" and working at what you love. "The key to cheerfulness, I discovered...was forward motion," he writes. "The calm contemplative life equals melancholy." Keillor's moments of contemplation have produced some of the finest essays in this lovely collection.
COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
May 15, 2014
Storyteller, radio personality, poet, essayist, and novelist Keillor (founder and host of radio variety show A Prairie Home Companion; WLT: A Radio Romance) is often compared to the likes of Mark Twain and writes frequently about the idiosyncrasies of small Midwestern town life. His stories are usually thought-provoking, full of nostalgia, and occasionally biting but always entertaining. And so it is with this collection of essays, monologs, poetry, and even some song lyrics. Most of these are new--at least to this reviewer--but there are a few zingers that appeared on A Prairie Home Companion. The stories, which are arranged in broad sections entitled "The News from Lake Wobegon," "Iconic Pajamas," "Guys I Have Known," and "Life's Little Day," cover a wide range of events--from his popular childhood "tomato butt" tale, in which he fears imprisonment for lobbing an overripe tomato at his sister, to the more serious story of the drowning of his cousin Roger in 1951 and the fear of water that tragedy instilled in him. But even amid tragedy, Keillor can find something amusing, a small kernel of humor that makes life enjoyable. VERDICT Fans of A Prairie Home Companion and general audiences will enjoy this delightful volume of works by a master storyteller.--Mark Manivong, Lib. of Congress, Washington, DC
Copyright 2014 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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