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Famous Children and Famished Adults: Stories

Autor Evelyn Hampton
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 19 feb 2019
Winner of FC2’s Ronald Sukenick Innovative Fiction Prize

Stories that remap the world to reveal hidden places we have always suspected of existing and scenarios that show us glimpses of ourselves
 
In these stories, readers encounter a wizened, silent child; a documentary filmmaker lost in the Amazon; a writer physically overwhelmed by the amount of content she has generated; the disappearance of the world’s cats; and an enormous houseplant that has become quietly malevolent. Through these encounters, which are presented with insightful, intricate, and often very funny writing, readers come to know the scintillating zone where fiction and reality become indistinguishable.
 
Working in the tradition of voice impressionists like Maria Bamford, Hampton draws on a wide range of styles and voices to tell stories that seem at once familiar and strange, spoofed and invented. Readers who have enjoyed the work of Shirley Jackson, George Saunders, Lydia Davis, or Robert Walser will be at home in these pages, but so too will readers who have given up on fiction. These stories show us that insouciance can be beautiful, confusion can be intricate and ordered, and rule-breaking can be a discipline all its own.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781573660693
ISBN-10: 1573660698
Pagini: 160
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Ediția:First Edition, First Edition
Editura: University Of Alabama Press
Colecția Fiction Collective 2

Notă biografică

Evelyn Hampton is the author of Discomfort, The Aleatory Abyss, and the chapbooks MADAM, Seven Touches of Music, and We Were Eternal and Gigantic. She lives in Denver.

Recenzii

“Hampton’s fictions challenge us by surprising us. Deceiving us with surface simplicity, they turn on themselves to create something larger, an understory very much alive and unpredictable as well as psychological. In fact, each of these stories seem like pearls inside the oyster of a narrator’s mind. ‘An oyster forms a pearl in response to irritation. Something unwanted gets into its shell, and the oyster envelops it, to make it more like itself.’”
Rain Taxi

“Evelyn Hampton's stories are terrific, unexpected word events: some built from subverted and perverted romcom premises; some lucid dreamt metaphors extended past absurdity to return to wisdom; some pre-splintered into archaeological shards but with the knowledge of our ruins vibrating within. Or, as Hampton writes, these are ‘another encounter with Madam.’ Elsewhere, the derangements of childhood find home in voices skillfully projected into non-orphans writhing with unsatisfied wants, panting and parentless beside their American moms and dads. In Hampton's work, there is a writing of emptiness that I love. You should re-pot that plant, you should pulverize the deluging content into mist, you should enter the center of the wasp—and you should read Evelyn Hampton.”
—Eugene Lim, author of Dear Cyborgs

“Evelyn Hampton’s stories are marvels, spells cast by a magical hand. Here objects are ensouled; cats vanish by the hundreds; children shrink; mother-remnants persist. The exotic and the toxic intermingle, the has-been and the husband. I hear Pliny, Beckett, Lewis Carroll—echoes of other beguiling and clamorously spooky worlds. Hampton makes anything possible.”
—Noy Holland, author of I Was Trying to Describe What It Feels Like“I cannot say enough about Famous Children and Famished Adults. Structured with an oddball, stringent logic, this is a modern masterpiece that boldly sings in cadences funny, wrenching, linguistically bold, and sweetly hopeful. It’s the work of a time/space traveling superhero, a linguistic Ninja. Brava!”
—Lynn Crawford, author of Shankus Kitto: A Saga

Descriere

Stories that remap the world to reveal hidden places we have always suspected of existing and scenarios that show us glimpses of ourselves