Mennonites Don't Dance: Short Stories
Autor Darcie Friesen Hossacken Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 mai 2023 – vârsta ani
Set on the Canadian prairies, one story follows a young girl into a labyrinth of frozen meat lockers where she becomes trapped by more than just the ice. In another, a son cares for the dying father who ground his childhood to dust.
Threaded with moments of both dark humour and unexpected grace, this second edition of Mennonites Don’t Dance also contains a new story, not included in the original.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781990160240
ISBN-10: 1990160247
Pagini: 222
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 6 mm
Editura: Tidewater Press
Colecția Tidewater Press
Locul publicării:New Westminster, Canada
ISBN-10: 1990160247
Pagini: 222
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 6 mm
Editura: Tidewater Press
Colecția Tidewater Press
Locul publicării:New Westminster, Canada
Cuprins
Luna
Ashes
Ice House
Little Lamb
Mennonites Don’t Dance
Dandelion Wine
Marrow
Loft
Magpie
Undone Her
Year of the Grasshopper
Poor Nella Pea
Acknowledgments
Ashes
Ice House
Little Lamb
Mennonites Don’t Dance
Dandelion Wine
Marrow
Loft
Magpie
Undone Her
Year of the Grasshopper
Poor Nella Pea
Acknowledgments
Recenzii
“. . . a complex treasure . . . Each story is wrapped in themes of anger, guilt and the Mennonite work ethic. Thankfully, the jagged edges of this treasure are gilded, occasionally, with grace and hope.” Adelia Neufeld Wiens, Winnipeg Free Press
“There’s an unfussy purity of expression here, and of narrative control, that sometimes recalls the short fiction of Alistair MacLeod. Images come cleanly to the mind’s eye while the prose itself recedes. The other MacLeodian element is Hossack’s stealthy way with emotion. She never tells you how to feel. When you do find your heart opening to these characters, it rises from their auth-
enticity, and a sure authorial hand with the interplay of surprise and inevitability.” Jim Bartley, The Globe and Mail
“There’s an unfussy purity of expression here, and of narrative control, that sometimes recalls the short fiction of Alistair MacLeod. Images come cleanly to the mind’s eye while the prose itself recedes. The other MacLeodian element is Hossack’s stealthy way with emotion. She never tells you how to feel. When you do find your heart opening to these characters, it rises from their auth-
enticity, and a sure authorial hand with the interplay of surprise and inevitability.” Jim Bartley, The Globe and Mail