The Accomplished Guest

The Accomplished Guest
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Stories

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
iran گزارش تخلف

فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2017

نویسنده

Ann Beattie

ناشر

Scribner

شابک

9781501111402
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

April 24, 2017
Growing old isn’t easy, as the aging intellectuals of Beattie’s latest story collection demonstrate. These 13 wry, chatty, seemingly random stories show disaffected husbands and wives, brothers and sisters, parents and children, professors and students in their 60s, 70s, and 80s at unsociable moments connected with social gatherings. In “The Indian Uprising,” once-promising poet Maude lunches at a Washington, D.C., restaurant with her former poetry professor. He has heart trouble and diabetes, can barely walk, and faces dialysis, but it is Maude who, after running into her ex-husband, faints. “For the Best” follows former model Gerald to a New York City Christmas party where he expects to see his ex-wife. She doesn’t appear until after he leaves the party, in the lobby of the hosts’ apartment building, when she jumps out, very drunk, from behind a Christmas tree. “The Astonished Woodchopper” describes resentments surfacing at a wedding via an argument about who will go to the airport to pick up the bride’s son. How childishly grown-ups can behave is made disturbingly clear in “The Debt,” about friends from college days extracting a costly revenge. Women sharing confidences are interrupted by a hold-up man in “The Gypsy Chooses the Whatever Card.” A sisterly reunion unravels in “Other People’s Birthdays.” Set in Maine, Charlottesville, East Coast cities, and Key West, Beattie’s stories capture the perplexity of people, lost in a world of terrorists and Kindles, as they make their way down what Beattie calls “the river of life’s confusion.”



Kirkus

April 1, 2017
The John Cheever of her generation, Beattie (The State We're In: Maine Stories, 2015, etc.) has long chronicled the emotional foibles of upper-middle-class WASPs with sharply chiseled wit; in these 13 new stories, travel or a visit of some sort is the common thread, mortality the common theme.The settings are along the East Coast with an emphasis on favorite Beattie locales Key West and Maine. Her characters, even those who have fallen in status, are well-educated and of nominally liberal political persuasion. While elderly characters predominate, the middle-aged and younger face their own regrets. In "Anecdotes," elderly, self-centered Lucia's story of passion shocks her daughter Christine's friend Anna into mitigating pain she and Christine may have caused a shared lover's wife years earlier. In "Other People's Birthdays," 40-something Lawry visits her parents and sister Bett for Bett's birthday and witnesses the burden her parents carry in managing the mentally ill Bett's care. In two stories, young women travel to visit older men they admire--a former professor in the case of "The Indian Uprising"; in "The Cloud," a beloved uncle--only to realize the men are privately confronting fatal illnesses and are beyond the women's help. Another professor hosting former students fears he's dying in "Company." Eighty-year-old Gerald, attending a Manhattan Christmas party in "For the Best," and wheelchair-bound Alva, attending a Key West Christmas party in "Lady Neptune," both feel perplexed that life has passed them by. But the unnamed 80-year-old narrator of "The Gypsy Chooses the Whatever Card" performs a good deed for a younger woman and is rewarded with moments of unexpected excitement. In the charming "Hoodie in Xanadu," an elderly Key West widow forms an unexpected partnership with her agoraphobic neighbor, who has transformed his living room into a secret Xanadu. The middle-aged former frat brothers in "The Debt," perhaps the volume's darkest story, confront how "debased" their lives have become during a trip to Key West that ends in tawdry violence. Despite flickers of optimism, this is a somber collection pondering mortality, fate, and the unknowability of others.

COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



Library Journal

February 1, 2017
Here's Beattie's 11th story collection, following 2015's The State We're In: Maine Stories. Dealing with friendship, aging, and mortality, the pieces are often occasioned by visits, whether for a birthday, wedding, or reunion, and Beattie will no doubt explore the particular pleasures and travails of being either guest or host with scalpel-like precision.

Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.




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