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| The Collected Stories (FSG Classics) | 
enlarge | Author: Grace Paley Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Category: Book
List Price: $17.00 Buy New: $9.38 You Save: $7.62 (45%)
New (28) Used (11) from $6.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 42958
Media: Paperback Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 386 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.5 x 1.2
ISBN: 0374530289 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780374530280 ASIN: 0374530289
Publication Date: April 3, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
This reissue of Grace Paley’s classic collection—a finalist for the National Book Award—demonstrates her rich use of language as well as her extraordinary insight into and compassion for her characters, moving from the hilarious to the tragic and back again. Whether writing about the love (and conflict) between parents and children or between husband and wife, or about the struggles of aging single mothers or disheartened political organizers to make sense of the world, she brings the same unerring ear for the rhythm of life as it is actually lived.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
People say short stories are dying... May 20, 2001 16 out of 17 found this review helpful
This collection of short fiction demonstrates just how horrible that would be. Grace Paley's work is amazing in its lyrical sound - at some moments sparse, at others extremely detailed, and always poignant. Stories about single mothers, about women visiting elderly parents in odd nursing homes, about families in general, and how the world works (and worked). It is hard to find a good short story writer... Somewhere between a novel (overly stuffed with words) and a poem (too highly styled and formatted to say what it really wants to say) a short story, when good, can come closest to literary perfection - you can say all that you want to say, but only that. Grace Paley's stories come close to that perfection. She is one of the most underappreciated great authors out there.
clearly female, uniquely brilliant August 13, 1998 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Nearly every book I've read on aging women has included a reference to Grace Paley's "The Long Distance Runner." Here it is, along with 43 other stories Paley has written since the beginning of her writing career. Anticipating an anthology of _stories_, the Paley-ignorant reader is bewildered, awed, and delighted in turns as Paley's darkly metaphorical tales reveal her clever humor and, ultimately, her unflagging hope for humanity. Using common language with an uncommon twist, Paley's descriptions cause the reader to laugh with familiarity: "The table was the enameled table common to our class, easy to clean, with wooden undercorners for indigent and old cockroaches that couldn't make it to the kitchen sink." "The Long Distance Runner" is a powerful allegory about menopause, that mystical time in a woman's life when so much more is happening than the simple cessation of menstrual flow. Paley attributes her success as a writer to the wonderful luck of the birth of the women's movement, which coincided with the publication of her first stories.
One of America's most underrated writers June 16, 2000 8 out of 12 found this review helpful
ENORMOUS CHANGES AT THE LAST MINUTE is a perfect collection of perfect stories. It's too bad the reader from Marietta, GA spews forth such ignorant bile about such a wonderful writer.
A gathering by a shrewd, inventive, always empathic Master. August 15, 1997 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
Word for word, there's more going on in one of Grace Paley's small masterpieces than in any hefty bestseller on-shelf today. With a single phrase, she can sum up the fullest life, skewer the truth at the heart of things, or send a story off in a direction that surprises in the most satisfying ways. This is an artist who creates characters who live, who delight, who enrich us for knowing them, however briefly. In my favorite story, "A Conversation with My Father," Paley provides a summation of her aesthetic: "Everyone, real or invented," the story tells us, "deserves the open destiny of life." In this collection, you will find a fearless, insightful, & inventively-entertaining explorer as your guide to such "open destinies." It's all here: romance, satire, experimental art, drama that's almost epic, humane warmth. This is literature at its freshest, not because it's new, but because it is timeless
Living in the neighborhood December 9, 2003 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
The characters in these stories are consistent throughout the book. Reading the stories was like getting acquainted with a community of people. I lost interest in some stories, while others contained gems of wisdom and phrases that stopped me in my tracks.In a story called, "A Conversation With My Father" Paley writes: ""I would like you to write a simple story just once more," he says, "the kind Maupassant wrote, or Chekhov, the kind you used to write. Just recognizable people and then write down what happened to them next." I say, "Yes, why not? That's possible." I want to please him, though I don't remember writing that way. I would like to try to tell such a story, if he means the kind that begins:'There was a woman..." followed by plot, the absolute line between two points which I've always despised. not for literary reasons, but because it takes all hope away. Everyone, real or invented, deserves the open destiny of life."
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