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In the next section, we will list the themes in the story “They’re Not Your Husband” by Raymond Carver. Remember that, usually, a story has one main theme and a number of other secondary themes. The protagonist’s main concern is the way his wife looks, and an important theme in the story is that of physical appearance. Raymond Carver Credit Illustration. Cd gian e giovanni ao vivo downloads. Lish’s changes to a passage in “They’re Not Your Husband”. Buy Short Cuts by Raymond Carver (ISBN. They're very convincing and realistic. Editorial License: Raymond Carver. Every artist should be required to compare the manuscript Raymond Carver submitted to his editor.
Start by marking “The Crying of Lot 49” as Want to Read:
In Neighbors and They’re not your husband, dramatic and situational irony are both utilized. Readers can appreciate the subtly placed examples of dramatic and situational irony throughout the works of Carver. Cathedral by Raymond Carver is the story about a blind man, Robert, who visits a husband and wife in their home. My personal fave has been 'They're not your husband', but I also really liked the three you mention. In 'Nobody said anything', though, the whole fish metaphor and symbolism was a bit laborious for me. If you were D.H. Lawrence scholar Keith Cushman and believed you had stumbled upon a brilliant rewrite of one of the master's tales you might draft a letter to the most influential short-story writer of your time. And Raymond Carver just might write you back. Raymond Carver They Re Not Your Husband Pdf To Word. Discover all of the information you need to know about your job search and career. Raymond Carver bibliography - Wikipedia. The bibliography of Raymond Carver consists of 7. Section 508 Website Accessibility Certain documents on this site are available as a Portable Document. Get this from a library! Short cuts: selected stories. [Raymond Carver] -- A movie tie-in edition to the brilliant new film by Robert Altman, based on these nine stories by Carver, 'one of the great short story writers of our time--of any time' (Philadelphia Inquirer).
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Preview — The Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon
Suffused with rich satire, chaotic brilliance, verbal turbulence and wild humor, The Crying of Lot 49 opens as Oedipa Maas discovers that she has been made executrix of a former lover's estate. The performance of her duties sets her on a strange trail of detection, in which bizarre characters crowd in to help or confuse her. But gradually, death, drugs, madness and marriag..more
Published October 17th 2006 by Harper Perennial (first published 1966)
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James KeeganYou probably already know of them but, if you haven't, maybe try some of the modernist writers like Faulkner and Woolf. Pynchon's syntax appeals to me…moreYou probably already know of them but, if you haven't, maybe try some of the modernist writers like Faulkner and Woolf. Pynchon's syntax appeals to me in a similar way to Woolf's. I recently read Faulkner's Light in August and it was really surprising in that it combined a fast-paced, violent story with a very impressionistic, occasionally very dense style, which is similar to what Pynchon does a lot, especially in the one of his I'm reading now. I wasn't expecting such an exciting story, having only read The Sound and the Fury before that. Also Nabokov's pale fire is another early and influential post-modern work. I still haven't gotten all the way through it but it's really interesting, just waiting for the right time to start it again. Hopefully this isn't all just stuff you're already familiar with.(less)
Benjamin WhitneyWhat joy! Your question has not only filled me with happiness but also taken me down memory lane, to a place when I first tried to read this book,…moreWhat joy! Your question has not only filled me with happiness but also taken me down memory lane, to a place when I first tried to read this book, coincidentally, happiness does not immediately come to mind during that time.
Welcome to the struggle of Pynchon. The answer is yes, it is written in an alternate style of English, Pynchon English. (less)
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Rating details
so imagine you're browsing through a bookstore on a lazy saturday afternoon.
you stop in the pynchon section, and there, out of the corner of your eye, you see this *guy* and he's checking you out. you think, wow! this is one for the movies! does this actually happen? (this is a sexually oriented biased review, sorry)
you proceed to chat, laughing at the length of gravity's rainbow. and you go next door with your new books to grab a cup of coffee, which turns into dinner, whuch turns in to crepes..more
Feb 23, 2011
Ian 'Marvin' Graye rated it
it was amazing Shelves: reviews, read-2012, reviews-5-stars, pynchon
Appetite for Deconstruction
Most readers approach a complex novel, like a scientist approaches the world or a detective approaches a crime - with an appetite for knowledge and understanding, and a methodology designed to satiate their appetite.
“The Crying of Lot 49” (“TCL49”) presents a challenge to this type of quest for two reasons.
One, it suggests that not everything is knowable and we should get used to it.
Second, the novel itself fictionalizes a quest which potentially fails to allow the fem..more
Jun 13, 2011
Stephen rated it
liked it Shelves: literature, x-filing-and-secret-histories, classics, audiobook, 1954-1969, humor-and-satire
My first excursion into the Pynchonesque…and it left me disorientated, introspective and utterly confused about how exactly I feel about it. I’m taking the cowards way out and giving it three stars even though that makes me feel like I’m punting the responsibility football and doing my best imitation of an ostrich when trouble walks by.
I am going to have to re-read this. My assumption is that I began this book taking Pynchon a little too lightly. I decided to start my exploration of Pynchon he..more
The kind of book that makes people hate books. Literally one of, if not, the worst story I've ever read. A classic English majors only book, aka people like talking about this book and that they 'get it' make you feel like their intellectual inferior. This book is the literary equivalent of some hipster noise band that everyone knows sucks but people will say they are good just to be in the 'know.'
I must say this before I get a bunch of messages from people looking down their nose at me. I do '..more
May 08, 2015
Seemita rated it
really liked itRecommends it for: those who wish their sanity to go for a ride
Shelves: alpha-meta-dig-a, fiction, other-awards-w, america
Muted – I am in an alien way,
Post – reading this weird novel about a
Horn – that despite many mouths, remains
Muted – across the
Post – offices of circuitous US lands although the blare of this
Horn – is audible to a secretive group that moves in
Muted – shadows and sews in its hem, high
Post – bearers and zany professors who insist to
Horn – out any intruders who, in public or
Muted – way, attempt to
Post – any letters sent with this
Horn – bearing stamp to any
Muted – or alive..more
Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49 is not for everyone (mostly I know this because I’ve recommended this book before and been dismayed when it was not loved). I’ve been reading a lot of books lately which are not easily classifiable, and The Crying of Lot 49 definitely fits that mold. For me, it is a wild ride through layers of conspiracy, alternative history (mostly in the form of an ‘underground’ postal system), some heavy-duty neurosis and 60s LA suburbia. When you have all that, it’s just..more
Jun 07, 2012
Jenn(ifer) rated it
really liked it · review of another edition
Recommended to Jenn(ifer) by: Tristero!
Shelves: cross-continental-book-club, gr-group-coreads, you-should-read-this, read-in-2012
Once upon a time I won this book from Stephen M. Apparently, Mr. M. had purchased this book used. The previous owner being a young scholar filled the inside cover pages with erudite observations gleaned from the text. I present them for you here in their entirety (along with my parenthetical comments):
1. Immoral in beginning; mostly about how we think (deep)
2. Mucho takes drugs to escape problems (ya don't say)
3. She's searching for answers because she thinks there's a conspiracy in the male (si..more
Sep 09, 2012Arthur Graham rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Quite fittingly, I'm sitting down to write this review after having just checked the mail. Nothing today but junk and bills. Save for my paltry royalty checks and the occasional bit of fan mail here and there (fans, you know who you are), that's about all I get most days, but this still doesn't stop me from checking the box two, three, or even four times until something shows up. On the odd day there's no mail before suppertime, I'm usually left somewhat disconcerted. What, no catalogs? No super..more
Oct 27, 2009Kemper rated it liked it · review of another edition
I really want to like Thomas Pynchon. I love the whole brilliant but reclusive author act, and all the cool kids at the library seem to think he’s the cat’s ass. But I’m starting to think that he and I are never going to be friends.
I tried to read Gravity’s Rainbow twice and wound up curled up in the fetal position , crying while sucking my thumb. Supposedly, this is his most accessible book. It was easier to read than GR, but easier to understand? Well…….
Oedipa Maas unexpectedly finds herself..more
Mar 31, 2018Barry Pierce rated it liked it · review of another edition
Y'know I feel sorry for Pynchon. He's gained a reputation as a 'difficult writer'. This problem plagues Faulkner as well. People go into Pynchon's and Faulkner's novels and quickly realise that things happen very differently in here and thus, unnerved by the shock of the new, hastily retreat. It's a pity. My best advice for reading Pynchon? Stop trying to understand everything. If a passage, or a page, or hell, even a whole chapter doesn't make any sense, don't bother yourself over it. Just move..more
Jul 16, 2016
Michael Finocchiaro rated it
really liked it Shelves: fiction, american-20th-c, post-modern, novels
I know everyone thinks that this - along with Gravity's Rainbow - is Pynchon's masterpiece and yes, Oedipa Maas is one crazy-ass protagonist and an incredible addition to the post-modern canon. The story itself was funny and absurd and exciting. I guess I just wanted a conclusion. Sort of like with V where I was really invested but then was like, ummm so what does this all mean?
All that being said, it is still Pynchon and is still amazing.
Oct 02, 2009
Manny rated it
really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: well-i-think-its-funny, too-sexy-for-maiden-aunts, parody-homage, story-review, pooh-dante, blame-jordan-if-you-like
'So, what do you think it's about?' she asked, as she took a preliminary sip from her cocktail. 'Entropy, to start with,' he replied. 'If only he'd known the Holographic Principle. It follows from thermodynamic calculations that the information content of a black hole is proportional to the square of its radius, not the cube, and the Universe can reasonably be thought of as a black hole. Hence all its information is really on its surface, and the interior is a low-energy illusion. Wouldn't you s..more
Dumb. Overrated. And the only plus here? It's a short novel.
A mystery with no solution. I think the only person that can pull this off is David Lynch. But he's no novelist. This is absurdism and pretentiousness at its utmost. I really did not enjoy trying to 'figure out' a, truth be told, lost cause.
Skip. Please vanish from the 1001 Musts list! We do not need a hybrid Don DeLillo, Nathaniel West, David Cronenberg. Truly. Sort of a ridiculous embarrassment.
Og think nasty writer-man laughing at Og.
Raymond Carver They're Not Your Husband Pdf To Jpg
Apr 21, 2012Paul rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Where do you start with a novel like this. There are so many trails and plays with words and their meaning that it is dizzying. There is a central character called Oedipa who becomes co-executor of an ex flames estate and inadvertantly steps into what may or may not be a global conspiracy stretching back through the ages.
Lots of interesting characters turn up and may (or may not) be part of the conspiracy. Oedipa's therapist turns out to be an ex-Nazi who worked in Buchenwald and there is an on..more
Jun 24, 2012Mary rated it liked it · review of another edition
Reading The Crying of Lot 49 reminded me of the first time I watched Mulholland Drive. There was hair pulling. There was rewinding and pausing and what?!what?!thefuck?!what?! The remote was flung across the room. There may have almost been tears. It was wonderfully frustrating and deliciously delusional. Yes, Mr Lynch, Mr Pynchon , you're so so clever and lil average me is a mere mortal squirming around on your chess tables..
But I don't care. Confuse me. It's better than most of the crap out t..more
Dec 18, 2007Richard rated it it was ok
Harold Bloom (and apparently everyone else I know) is clearly out of his G.D. mind. This book is not hilariously funny. I did not appreciate the humor in this book at all. I liked the bit about the play but the book seemed too cutesy and gimmicky to me. I've been looking at reviews all over and (much like the reviews for the film No Country for Old Men) I seem only to find the same old enthusiastic descriptions of the book and no compelling reason for why I should appreciate the longest 183 page..more
Mar 19, 2015Vit Babenco rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
The world is full of signs and symbols and emblems and omens… One just should learn to read them…
Beneath the notice, faintly in pencil, was a symbol she'd never seen before, a loop, triangle and trapezoid.
“The seventh angel sounded his trumpet, and there were loud voices in heaven…” Revelation 11:15
Thomas Pynchon is a cognoscente of all sorts of conspiracies and The Crying of Lot 49, a somewhat sad post-noir burlesque, set amidst trashy cultural and behavioural patterns, concerns itself with a w..more I really enjoyed both Gravity's Rainbow and Mason & Dixon, but this effort felt flat to me, all joke and no seriousness of purpose. Whereas both GR and MD had their share of satire and often strained attempts at humor, they also had a deadly serious side, a sense that they were 'about something' larger, that I confess I couldn't glean from this slimmer work. Really, there are only so many puns and crazy character names and odd paranoid acronyms I can take. I'm sure much of the fault lies wit..more
Dec 17, 2010Praj rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Interested in sophisticated fun? You, hubby, girlfriends?
The more the merrier. Get in touch with Tristero, through
WASTE only, Box 49.
Its funny how Pynchon does not scares me anymore. He is not the tentacled Cthulhu (thanks Mr. Lovecraft for my insomniac exhibits) I thought he was. I guess Gravity’s Rainbow was the ice-breaker. But what’s this obsession with myriad dimensions of entropy, Thomas? The explosive universal 'black hole'. Drives me nuts at times!! Who am I kidding? Entropy and thermod..more
Jul 23, 2018Ivana Books Are Magic rated it really liked it
Sign me in for more Thomas Pynchon, please. This was my first reading of him, and I was honestly blown away. How is it possible that I haven't read him sooner? Well, it's never too late to discover a good writer. I'm actually happy that I dived into this novel blissful unaware of anything regrading the author, the time period it was written in or the novel itself. That made the reading all the more fun. The Crying of Lot 49 has proved to be such an exquisite literary surprise! If this novel is a..more
May 13, 2011Trevor rated it really liked it
This is one of those books – you know, those books where the author would be too clever by half if he wasn’t so clever to be able to get away with it. There is something very ‘adolescent male’ about this book – accept it is probably just too smart to be really understood by your average adolescent male. It is also, at times, very funny.
I was going to write a review that would be just the string of discordant images this book throws at you at machine-gun speed – but instead I am going to put myse..more
Mar 02, 2008
Martine rated it
liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: north-american, modern-fiction, postmodern
I'm not sure how much I care for Thomas Pynchon's brand of postmodernism. On the one hand, The Crying of Lot 49 contains interesting ideas, culminating in a weird trip down Paranoia Lane. On the other hand, the writing is so detached and plain weird that it is hard to emotionally invest in the characters. As a novel of ideas, then, The Crying of Lot 49 has some merit; as a reading experience it's rather less rewarding. It feels like a 200-page story crammed into 127 pages, and that's not a compl..more
Sep 22, 2015
Matthew rated it
liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: library, 2015, completist-book-club, classic
Maybe 3.5 stars
It was weird! It was unique!
Hey, Thomas Pynchon - could you write us a book where a woman goes to oversee the estate of a real estate mogul and along the way deals with her DJ husband on LSD, an adulterous pedophilic lover, a Nazi psychiatrist on a shooting spree - all in search of information about a secret society who's only anti-government movement is to run their own postal system (which she becomes intrigued about because of a play she sees with one word that seems out of pla..more
Jun 17, 2011Jan-Maat added it · review of another edition
Er..
you really have to read it for yourself..
Abruptly change the subject..
A literary precursor to The big Lebowski but with more about the postal systems of renaissance Europe..
The figure of the detective or private investigator merges with the quest tradition, at the end do we find C.G. Jung's Synchronicity? An intricate and cunning plot from beyond the grave? Nothing? Mid sixties American picaresque adventure? It you read it yourself you can make your own mind up, or not.
The investigator c..more
Oct 05, 2010Mike Puma rated it it was amazing
Language that cannot be attended to casually. A novel where the plot isn’t used to move the story but to move the language, to compel it. Whitman’s 20th century novel. If you’re wanting a good story, this probably isn’t what you’re looking for (so, by all means, blame the author for you’re having read the wrong book). If you’re looking for a good story told with a compelling use of language—language to be savored and considered and wallowed in—this is a great one.
For a good intro to this novel..more
Feb 27, 2008Dusty Myers rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I'm if anything a fussy writer. The sort of guy who prefers to come up with excuses why all the factors surrounding the writing of some story or chapter aren't quite right, rather than actually sit down and let the thing get written anyway. I like to worry sentences, and I like to worry about sentences that sound like other sentences I've read so many times before. 'She got out of the car and looked searchingly up at the sky.' There's some piece in me that could never be satisfied with that sitt..more
Jan 19, 2012
Stephen M rated it
liked it · review of another edition
Recommends it for: A hieroglyphic sense of concealed meaning
Recommended to Stephen M by: marchin' thru the Pynchon battlefield
Shelves: mentions-mitchell, i-dont-even, too-mass-pin-cushion
The first and only time that I read Hamlet was in my High School AP english class. The teacher, being by far the best english teacher that I’ve had throughout my oh so illustrious english career, was a wonderfully animated and intelligent fellow. For our reading of the Oresteia, he drew stick figures on the board, highlighting with screaming delight the furious eyebrows of Clytemnestra. Every class was a surefire combination of zaniness and intelligence that I came to love from one day to the ne..more
Jun 24, 2009
Agnieszka rated it
liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: own-a-copy, 2013, reviewed, 1001-books, pynchon
I’ve no idea what Pynchon took while he was writing but I ask for the same.
But seriously, I really don’t know what to think about that book. Great conspiracy or great baloney? Have to admit that I’m in a dither. It’s useless to describe the plot but in short: Oedipa Maas has been made executrix of her former lover Pierce Inverarity‘s estate. Fulfilling her duties she discovers the existence of mystery postal service called Tristero. Mafia, freemasons, secret signs? Is someone manipulate Oedipa?..more
Feb 15, 2017Greg rated it liked it
UPDATE: This author interprets the Beatles' famous song, 'She Loves You,' in a way I had never thought about. Whether it is a new interpretation or not, I don't know. But in summary, 'she' is every woman who has ever lived, and 'you' is all of us. And given further thoughts supplied by other goodread readers, I'm gonna add a star to my original two-star rating. 'Change my mind, please,' I always say! The ending might indeed be the perfect ending for this book after all, as my goodreads friend To..more
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Thomas Ruggles Pynchon, Jr. is an American writer based in New York City, noted for his dense and complex works of fiction. Hailing from Long Island, Pynchon spent two years in the United States Navy and earned an English degree from Cornell University. After publishing several short stories in the late 1950s and early 1960s, he began composing the novels for which he is best known today: V. (1963..more
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“I came,' she said, 'hoping you could talk me out of a fantasy.'
Cherish it!' cried Hilarious, fiercely. 'What else do any of you have? Hold it tightly by it's little tentacle, don't let the Freudians coax it away or the pharmacists poison it out of you. Whatever it is, hold it dear, for when you lose it you go over by that much to the others. You begin to cease to be.” — 204 likes
“Shall I project a world?” — 121 likes
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Preview — Short Cuts by Raymond Carver
The nine stories and one poem collected in this volume formed the basis for the astonishingly original film “Short Cuts” directed by Robert Altman. Collected altogether in this volume, these stories form a searing and indelible portrait of American innocence and loss. From the collections Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?, Where I’m Calling From, What We Talk About When We..more
Published September 14th 1993 by Vintage
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Rating details
May 12, 2012
Ahmad Sharabiani rated it
really liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: short-stories, fiction, literature, american, 20th-century
Short cuts: Selected Stories, Raymond Carver
Short Cuts: Selected Stories (1993) – published to accompany the Robert Altman film Short Cuts.
Also, Short Cuts is a 1993 American comedy-drama film, directed by Robert Altman. Filmed from a screenplay by Altman and Frank Barhydt, it is inspired by nine short stories and a poem by Raymond Carver. The film has a Los Angeles setting, which substitutes the Pacific Northwest backdrop of Carver's stories. Short Cuts traces the actions of 22 principal charac..more
Mar 30, 2019
They Re Not Your Husband Pdf
Darwin8u rated it
really liked it Shelves: american, 2019, fiction, short-stories, poetry
“The past is unclear. It's as if there is a film over those early years. I can't even be sure that the things I remember happening really happened to me.”
― Raymond Carver, 'So Much Water So Close to Home' in Short Cuts
Four stars mainly because there isn't much new here. Great here? Absolutely. Most of it is fantastic. Altman loved Carver and you can tell in the movie and his selections of stories. My first introduction to Carver was watching Altman's Short Cuts while still in high school. I like..more
I'd never read Carver before and probably won't read more even though I admired and liked his pithy 'just-telling-what-happened' style. Most of these stories are slices of life: drinking men's dark nights of the soul, the unhappy women in their lives (even if the narrator is a woman), male violence, and the ultimate futility of existence. But then there was one story called 'A Small Good Thing' about the death of a child, and it knocked the wind out of me. It was dark as well, but a lot more—wor..more
Finally got round to reading some Raymond Carver. I didn’t realise initially that this compilation was taken from various collections, selected by a filmmaker who made a movie out of these stories woven loosely together. I would have preferred to read a collection of stories as originally intended by the author himself, so that I can try to make sense of the connections between the stories myself, rather than through the intermediary of a movie director. Oh well.
Anyway, I did enjoy these stories..more
They Re Not Your Husband Analysis
Feb 26, 2016Robert Vaughan rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
If I could give this book ten stars, I would. I LOVE Ray Carver's book(s) so freaking much. I remember reading stories from this collection before I really decided to become an author, and his scope of storytelling made me write in my journal, even as an undergrad: I wish I wrote that sentence. About 100 times! I can't even remember how many times I have read just this one book of his, let alone other Carver books, also.
If you ever think you might not be a writer, or might not want to be in thi..more
Jan 15, 2019
Lea rated it
liked it · review of another edition
Shelves: read-in-english, usa, shortstories, 2019
This was my first foray into Raymond Carver's oeuvre. I expected to love this because of what I'd read about his writing and several of my favourite authors citing him as an inspiration. Clean, sleek minimalist short stories that pack a punch sounded just like my kind of thing.
And there were some brilliant stories, most notably 'Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?' (what an amazing title too!), but others I found not really going anywhere. Also, due to the very minimalist style and the briefness,..more
Aug 30, 2016Claire Fuller rated it really liked it
Stories about ordinary lives and ordinary people, where an extraordinary thing happens, or something not so extraordinary, but it becomes so by the action of the characters. I liked them all, I like Carver's style of writing (reminding me of Richard Yates, John Williams, even Richard Ford a bit) - matter of fact. But what is striking is how these stories end. They all finish at odd, but perfect points, as if the story isn't quite ended, but it is ended enough, as though Carver has allowed the re..more
Nov 23, 2008Lindsay rated it really liked it
This has been sitting on my DVD shelf for a few years now as the Criterion companion to the movie. While I really enjoy the movie, I think I ended up buying it just because there was a book included in the packaging. And thank goodness..Carver might have continued to go undetected by me as--for the most part--all I've ever heard him discussed is a one sentence nod of approval in passing. Not that I could have predicted it, but I'm glad I've waited to read his work because I might not have appre..more
Nov 11, 2007
Andrew rated it
it was amazing Shelves: literary, made-me-cry
At my birthday party, I mentioned to someone that I had recently read these stories, and two other people, seperate from each other and from me, started raving about how good Carver is. It's true.
All I want to do after reading this guy's stories is drink and beat my wife. Except beautifully.
Sample quote, from 'Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?':
'For their honeymoon they drove to Guadalajara, and while they both enjoyed visiting the decayed churches and the poorly lighted museums and the afterno..more
Sep 18, 2015
Margaret Madden rated it
it was amazing Shelves: library-book, short-stories, college-reading-list
One horrific character after another. The darkness within these men is written with mind-blowing simplicity. The American Dream gone bad. Love this collection!
Dec 01, 2014Brad rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
My introduction to Carver; a Greatest Hits album of sorts. Going in I expected something similar to Bukowski - drunks and affairs and domestic violence. It certainly contained all of those things, but it had something Bukowski lacks - a humanity. A tenderness and an eye for life's little moments that can mean more than is expressible in words. Grieving parents sitting in a bakery eating cinnabuns or a woman attending a funeral of a girl she's never met.
That's not to say Carver is in anyway sappy..more
I think I had probably read most of the stories before in other collections and also seen the Altman movie based on the stories. Carver's a brilliant writer, though very dark.
The rating is anticipatory as I haven't started yet. I've only read one Carver book so far(there aren't that many, sadly) but it was a five all the way. Never saw this movie though I've seen many of RA's
films, especially the earlier ones. 'Bout halfway through after reading 'Will You Please Be Quiet. Please.' this morning - a perfect rendering of a male betrayal fantasy. Be careful who you hand your ass to. It might come back hamburger. It was a bit of a come down to realize that I'd already rea..more
The big duh: Raymond Carver is one of the masters of the contemporary short story. The really great thing about Carver is that his stories are so easy -- you can blaze through them like a pop novel without missing a beat, and yet come out on the other end knowing you've read something tremendous. They are SIMPLE, but far from SIMPLISTIC.
This collection is actually a movie-to-book edition. In the 90s, Robert Altman (director of M*A*S*H and Nashville) created a film that put together 9 of Carver's..more
Nov 28, 2007Amy rated it really liked it · review of another edition
It's interesting to read what a filmmaker chose from Carver's stories. These are the most dramatic Carver stories I know, full of death, adultery, bar fights, rape, murder, abandoned dogs.. Nobody, say, sits around a table getting drunk for a really long time and talking about love. But they're great. And it's been long enough since I've seen the movie that I didn't recall who played which character, or get frustrated with liberties that were taken. A hint, perhaps, of Lyle Lovett in the baker..more
Carver can take the everyday and charge it with the profound. He's got the knack for taking normal life and tearing it up into ragged pieces. There is drama and nuance, and MENACE. And he does it all in this fantastic minimalist voice. If you like him, check out Andre Dubus.
Apr 19, 2018Terry Clague rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Two things are certain: 1) people no longer care what happens; and 2) nothing makes any real difference any longer.
A stunningly good book, and one which is paradoxically both perfect & completely ill-suited to reading just before and after childbirth.Mar 17, 2019F. rated it liked it
Having read 'Popular Mechanics,' I know that I am capable of enjoying Raymond Carver. Unfortunately, none of the stories in this collection grabbed me as that one did.
Apr 17, 2016Jay rated it it was amazing
I came across the film 1CShort Cuts 1D and made a bee-line to the Raymond Carver books I have on my shelves. Famous film director Robert Altman had chosen from a handful of his short stories to weave a story of woe and despair in 1980 19s Los Angeles. That 19s it 13 the land of sun, sand, limosines, and a lot of drugs and alcohol - Altman goes to the heart of Carver 19s stories and brings us all home.
Often, I suppose because Carver 19s stories are non-traditional, most people who have read him..more
Jan 04, 2018Marco Etheridge rated it it was amazing
What can anyone say that hasn't been said? It's Carver, who is now becoming a cult figure. Regardless, he was a great writer. How can I capture the essence of a Raymond Carver story? It is a difficult proposition. Let me try this: a small vignette.
It is a bright spring morning in Seattle. The neighbors are going about their business; tending to flower beds, mowing their lawns. I'm standing at the bottom of a short flight of stairs, stairs that lead to what is soon not to be my house. The woman w..more
Dec 14, 2016Vishal rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
My typical reaction when I finished reading any one of these stories in Short Cuts was to put the book down, puff my cheeks out, stare ahead into silence for a few moments, and let the story sink in. In the case of Tell the Women We're Going, my reaction was more shock than deep contemplation. Carver writes some of the beautiful, powerful closing lines.
His prose doesn't contain any fireworks. Each sentence is weighted carefully with a poetic grace. His writing is simple, spare, elegant and with..more
Oct 18, 2010
Trixie Fontaine rated it
liked it Shelves: 2010-consumption, shorts, pac-nw-fiction
I know I'm *supposed* to give this five stars, and it's just mind-boggling I've never read any Raymond Carver before this (except So Much Water So Close to Home, but without knowing how 'important' it was or being able to remember why I felt like I'd seen the story take place right before my eyes -- which was because it was in the movie Short Cuts I finally realized when I saw this book at the library).
I've been given lots of quiet hints to read Raymond Carver and only recently picked up on them..more
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Oct 15, 2015Iris rated it really liked it
I grabbed this collection because my library didn't have 'What we talk about..' available. I didn't know about the film, either, and I didn't remember Carver being so unrelentingly brutal as these collected stories are. I'd like to reread some of the original collections soon because I am curious about whether the emotional atmosphere is always this gruelling.
Someone said once that misogyny is domestic terrorism & the stories in this collection illustrate that to a degree that made me nause..more
I read Short Cuts after reading What We Talk About.. and it's simply nowhere near as strong a collection, which seems fitting as it was compiled by Robert Altman and not Carver himself. About the highlights that don't completely overlap: 'A Small Good Thing' is one of the highlights here, a more elaborate version of 'The Bath' from What We Talk About.. with names, emotions, and even a resolution(!) provided this time around. 'They're Not Your Husband' is just about as Carver as anything he's e..more
This short story (and one poem) collection was the basis for the Altman film of the same title. You probably know this if you are a Carver fan, but this is collection is selected reprints from earlier works, not original material.
Carver's fiction is a bit touch and go for me, but when his stuff is working, it's devastating perfection. And included here are some of my favorite stories of his: 'A Small Good Thing','So Much Water So Close to Home', 'Jerry and Molly and Sam', 'Tell the Women We're..more
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So there are some stories in this collection that are altered versions of stories from What We Talk about When We Talk About Love. I was having difficulty with the chronology, though I believe What We Talk About (pub'd in 19981) came first. He also apparently rewrote some of the stories in Short Cuts when he wrote Where I'm Calling From .
The initial rewrites that I referred to (a.k.a. the ones I've actually read) include details and motives that contrast starkly with the spare character..more
Oddly enough I didn't like this collection of stories too much at first. I thought them abrupt & lacking & the dialogue silly & unrealistic & a bit clumsy. Somewhere in the middle, after a few stories, Carver's style just insisted on being appreciated & by the end of the book I was happily left wanting more. Quite a turn around! For every story it's as though you're just picked up & plunked in the middle of these character's lives for a short period of time, just enough t..more
I saw Short Cuts when it first came out in the theater in the early 90's(3 hours is too long to sit in a theater). I had just discovered Raymond Carver and I loved to see how Altman weaved together the stories. Got the movie and this book from the library last weekend. It didn't take me much longer to read the book than it took to watch the movie (did I mention 3 hrs!) I enjoyed the movie - some really amazing acting throughout - but not as much as I enjoyed reading the original stories. Carver'..more
Apr 09, 2015Monlenska December rated it really liked it · review of another edition
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My first Carver, and definitely won't be my last.
I love the simplicity in his writing, the kind of simplicity that can very well elucidate complicated things. How is that, I'm not sure. It's like gliding smoothly until you hit a massive wall.
Short Cuts tackled lives of people in marriage or has a family of their own (although I wasn't sure about that one story)
It's a basic topic, to be honest. But witnessing how vivid the horror and heartbreak were executed in the book, it kind of stretched my d..more
Jan 16, 2016Harald rated it it was amazing
These nine stories and a poem will be known to readers of Carver from his earlier collections, but according to the director Robert Altman, they inspired the plot of his own film 'Short Cuts' in 1993. Some of the stories are cut to the bone so much that they make little impression, but the two longer stories on how to relate to death (So Much Water So Close To Home; A Small, Good Thing) are harrowing and belong to my favorites. The introduction by Altman gives useful insights on how these spare..more
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Carver was born into a poverty-stricken family at the tail-end of the Depression. He married at 19, started a series of menial jobs and his own career of 'full-time drinking as a serious pursuit', a career that would eventually kill him. Constantly struggling to support his wife and family, Carver enrolled in a writing programme under author John Gardner in 1958. He saw this opportunity as a turni..more
“And certain things around us will change, become easier or harder, one thing or the other, but nothing will ever really be any different. I believe that. We have made our decisions, our lives have been set in motion, and they will go on and on until they stop. But if that is true, then what? I mean, what if you believe that, but you keep it covered up, until one day something happens that should change something, but then you see nothing is going to change after all. What then? Meanwhile, the people around you continue to talk and act as if you were the same person as yesterday, or last night, or five minutes before, but you are really undergoing a crisis, your heart feels damaged…” — 79 likes
“The past is unclear. It's as if there is a film over those early years. I can't even be sure that the things I remember happening really happened to me.” — 16 likes
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