It's been a while, but in the interim, American author Grace Paley passed away. I must admit that I never read loads of her work, but then, what I don't know would fill a room... for although A.M. Homes is not my favourite, Dan Schneider seems a bit harsh on the Laura Hird site. Homes did at least a twofer on Paley, here in 1998 and in the Guardian yesterday.
But we're democratic here at Parkbench, so go on and look her up yourself for your short fiction reading this week. Her greatest hits include 'Goodbye and Good Luck' (a popular title for her obit in lots of papers) and ‘A Conversation With My Father’. Really, she seems to have been a sweet, introspective, thoughtful type of woman, as suggested by this charming interview - somewhere in there the suggestion that we should have known more of her and her writing, though I suspect that at 26 I may be exactly the wrong age to have been introduced to her work in American highschool.
But most wonderfully, do please go and listen in to the writer herself through the links to past interviews and discussions on NPR in the States - nothing does it like audio.
Alternately, read the single most astonishing collection of short fiction of recent years - Walk the Blue Fields by Claire Keegan. I was thrilled to have met her last Christmas, and she gives off those eerie waves of genius. That's all there is to it. I hope someone lets me review it, and I will do so here soon.
Saturday, September 01, 2007
Shortie of the Week
Labels:
A. M. Homes,
Claire Keegan,
Grace Paley,
Irish fiction,
reviews,
short stories
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3 comments:
And here I was thinking your post was going to be about all 157 centimetres of me...
Ah, so the new bride wants a wedding post! With CUPCAKES, perchance. The parkbench considers your comment... though cupcakes would help.
Such blackmail! And I wasn't even after a wedding post: please, that is so August 2007. However, girl don't say no to cupcakes. Come!
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