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Twenty years ago Frederick Barthelme began publishing stories that turned readers’ expectations on their heads. In The New Yorker, Esquire, GQ, and elsewhere he published story after story that confounded the prevailing literary assumptions, treating our very ordinary lives with a new kind of careful and loving attention and imagination. He wrote intimate, funny, odd, detailed, laugh-out-loud stories about relationships that almost happen and ones that almost don’t, about the ways we look at each other when we mean things we cannot bring ourselves to say.
Before there were slackers, or kids in parking lots, or stories that took the mundane seriously, there were these prescient stories by Frederick Barthelme. He took a post-ironic stance before the post-ironic had a name. He took fiction where few were then willing to go, took as his subject small romances, private fears, suburban estrangement, office angst, cultural isolation, apparently insignificant humiliations, and the growing information surplus (CNN is a sociological novel, he once remarked). He wrote–and continues to write–with a laser-surgery precision that stuns and delights both readers and critics. If he arrived at the new-literature party a little earlier than the other guests, he has not left early, and is thus well represented in The Law of Averages, with old and new stories side by side, ready to give up their abundant pleasures. - Publisher's Website (Penguin Random House)
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The Law of Averages: New and Selected Stories
July 11, 2001, Counterpoint
Paperback
in English
1582431574 9781582431574
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Book Details
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"YOU WATCH the pretty salesgirl slide a box of Halston soap onto a low shelf, watch her braid slip off her shoulder, watch like an adolescent as the vent at the neck of her blouse opens slightly - she is twenty, maybe twenty-two, tan, and greatly freckled."
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May 11, 2022 | Edited by Encore Shops | description |
October 12, 2020 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
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April 27, 2011 | Edited by OCLC Bot | Added OCLC numbers. |
April 30, 2008 | Created by an anonymous user | Imported from amazon.com record |