
Mothers
Stories
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

November 1, 2018
Sweden, Mexico, England, Greece, Spain, Croatia, Ireland, Austria, Sweden again, and again, Paris, America, and etc.Power's internationalist 10-story debut is populated by travelers of many kinds--by characters lost in the world or in themselves. On vacation with his young family in Greece, the narrator of "The Colossus of Rhodes" (a masterly story) recalls a childhood trip to Rhodes and the violence(s) he encountered there. In "The Haväng Dolmen" (also masterly), an archaeologist undertakes an unsettling voyage to a stone-age burial site in Sweden where he "grasp[s] what it is to die." In "Johnny Kingdom," a stand-up comedian in a creative rut makes ends meet by impersonating a famous dead comedian--meanwhile looking for ways to "[leave] the Kingdom" of impersonation forever. In the meh-quality "Above the Wedding," an emotionally needy British alcoholic heads to a Mexican wedding and tries to seduce the groom...who had previously seduced him. In "The Crossing"--unconvincing and overly symbolic; the collection's weakest offering--a pair of romantically entangled trekkers cross (or don't) a few difficult streams. But the collection's most affecting traveler is Eva, the primary character of the three titular "Mother" stories. In the first of these, "Summer 1976," Eva is at once a 10-year-old Swedish girl who dreams of world travel and a 60-year-old narrator traveling through her memories, looking for truths about her mother who passed away only two years after the story's remembered events. Later, in the hauntingly subtle "Innsbruck," Eva--older, semiparanoid, suicidal, and seen now from the third person--drifts around Europe guided by her mother's 1970s travel guide ("because of its age it is almost worthless as a source of information") and eventually decides whether or not to continue with her life. The trilogy's long closing story, "Eva," which takes place some years after "Innsbruck," follows Joe, Eva's husband, as he and their daughter, Marie, struggle with Eva's depression, avoidance, and periods of unannounced, multiyear absences during which, fulfilling her childhood dreams, she wanders the world alone, sending postcards.Despite its uneven moments, Power's wide-ranging debut is confident, complex, bizarre, poignant, and elegantly crafted--a very strong collection.
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December 15, 2018
Who are we to each other? Who are we to ourselves? In this debut collection of 10 stories, columnist and short-story writer Power explores the challenges, frustrations, and oft times impenetrable mysteries of how we try to answer these questions. Answers are the least of these stories' ambitions. As one story's narrator begins his tale, Several months ago, while traveling in Sweden, I experienced something I have given up trying to explain. Rather than offering explanations, these stories thrive on closely observed details and moments told with both pathos and humor as characters confront the surprising twists and turns of love, sexual awakening, marriage, parenting, and decisions of life or death. From the story of a young girl who cannot close the gap with an apparently aloof mother to the tale of a comedian who has trapped himself inside his successful reenactment of another comedian's routine, Power asks us to consider and appreciate the very human and humanizing experience of striving for something just out of reach, or for opportunities just passed by.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)
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