Dating Miss Universe: Nine Stories

Author:   Steven Polansky
Publisher:   Ohio State University Press
ISBN:  

9780814208182


Pages:   196
Publication Date:   April 1999
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Dating Miss Universe: Nine Stories


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Full Product Details

Author:   Steven Polansky
Publisher:   Ohio State University Press
Imprint:   Ohio State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 13.90cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.386kg
ISBN:  

9780814208182


ISBN 10:   0814208185
Pages:   196
Publication Date:   April 1999
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

Polansky's debut volume - of skillful, and skillfully familiar, stories - is winner of Ohio's Sandstone Prize in Short Fiction. Leading off is Leg, which, though included in The Best American Short Stories 1995, may merely anger some in its telling of a religious family man who lets his injured leg go untreated until it needs amputation, all seemingly in order - by nursing this Christ-like scourge - to gain the respect of his sullen teenaged son. Other family dysfunctions occur in Sleight, with its pun on sleight/slight, a near-hyper-researched story about a magician whose daughter estranges him; and in the also ambiguously titled Rein, in which a man feels both trapped and made guilty by his wife's clinical depression, a situation that's little assuaged by a visit from the dashing, handsome horse-breeder who was once her lover, now enviably free. Less ambitiously symbol-structured pieces occur in Acts, another father-son tale, this time about athletics and courage; and in the title story, told by a Manhattan cabby who briefly - and with only purest intentions - stalks Miss Thailand around town. Caution is given in Beard that stories should never be written about writing stories, though breaking that rule - a 40-year-old man is winner of a fiction contest - results in Polansky's best and richest piece here, especially in its portrayal of the nationally known writer who comes to offer a master class to the winners. Less good overall is Pantalone, about a Prufrock-like English prof, his own marriage on the rocks, who falls in love with a beautiful student who has a scarred face; his passive inertia (he loses both wife and girl) may be central to the story's theme, but it gives no pleasure to the reader, as neither does his scarcely believable insensitivity. Conscientiously wrought fiction, always capable in scheme and technique, less often strongly involving. (Kirkus Reviews)


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