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The Goat Fish and the Lover's Knot

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Beautifully-crafted prose from one of Michigan's most original voices.

Elmore Leonard said about Jack Driscoll's stories, "The guy can really write." And in The Goat Fish and the Lover's Knot, he once again demonstrates in every sentence the grace and grit of a true storyteller. The ten stories are mostly set in Michigan's northern lower peninsula, a landscape as gorgeous as it is severe. If at times the situations in these stories appear hopeless, the characters nonetheless, and even against seemingly impossible odds, dare to hope. These fictional individuals are so compassionately rendered that they can hardly help but be, in the hands of this writer, not only redeemed but made universal.

The stories are written from multiple points of view and testify to Driscoll's range and understanding of human nature, and to how "the heart in conflict with itself" always defines the larger, more meaningful story. A high school pitching sensation loses his arm in a public school classroom during show and tell. A woman lives all of her ages in one day. A fourteen-year-old boy finds himself alone after midnight in a rowboat in the middle of the lake with his best friend's mother. Driscoll is a prose stylist of the highest order — a voice as original as the stories he tells.

Lovers of contemporary storytelling will revel in Driscoll's skill and insight on display in this unique collection.

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    • Booklist

      March 15, 2017
      Driscoll's (The World of a Few Minutes Ago, 2012) latest collection portrays a series of characters in the snowy, isolated border towns of the northern lower peninsula of Michigan. For these characters, even Kenosha, Wisconsin, feels a world away. Driscoll moves seamlessly between genres, narrative perspectives (such as the usage of second person in On This Day You Are All Your Ages ), and across time, from the 1970s to the present. At times he echoes the fiction of Canada's Craig Davidson, especially the boxing theme of Calcheck and Priest, but his stories are less pessimistic. Driscoll explores the effects of Vietnam and Iraq, fathers abandoning their children, the desperation and pride of financial hardship, and the aftershocks of violence, as in The Alchemist's Apprentice, which is told by Rollo, whose mother was burned and disfigured by a former lover. But Driscoll never concludes with such scenes; he always allows his characters to regroup and seek solutions. Moving across place and memory, these stories are technically dazzling and deeply affecting accounts of precarious lives in a unique environment.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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