Things to Come and Go
«Beneath the bright patter and eye-catching descriptions, each story has sadness at its core . . . a flood of energetic storytelling.»
Marion Winik, Washington Post
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Detaljer
- Forlag
- Picador
- Innbinding
- Innbundet
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Sider
- 160
- ISBN
- 9781529035889
- Utgivelsesår
- 2022
- Format
- 22 x 14 cm
Anmeldelser
«Beneath the bright patter and eye-catching descriptions, each story has sadness at its core . . . a flood of energetic storytelling.»
Marion Winik, Washington Post
«A quirky collection of three long stories by a writer of unusual talent, power and intelligence. Bette Howland has revealed from the start a vigorous, original voice, an incisive mind and an uncompromised lyrical vision . . . Descriptive passages of stunning power and beauty abound in this book; it is a trove of lyric riches.»
Johanna Kaplan, New York Times
«The three novellas that constitute Things to Come and Go feel, at moments, like thinly disguised autobiography. With her flexible stance toward reality, her eye for the amusing, curious minutiae of existence, and her tonal range . . . Howland recalls the short-story writer Lucia Berlin.»
<font face="verdana, tahoma"><span>Abigail Deutsch</span></font>, Harper's Magazine
«There is being seen, and then there is seeing. There is no seeing like Bette Howland's. On every page, catching the narrator's every glance, are observations rich in detail and delight—honest, acerbic, alert, and always dazzling in their inventiveness and wry, hard-edged wisdom.»
<span>Amitava Kumar</span>
«Howland's striking prose breathes life into the everyday, the domestic world sung with a lyrical note . . . reminiscent of Edna O'Brien, with shades too of Jea Rhys.»
Sarah Gilmartin, Irish Times
«
One of the significant writers of her generation
» Saul Bellow
«There’s no more interesting tale of neglect and rediscovery than that of Bette Howland.»
Lucy Scholes, Paris Review
«[Howland's] rhythmic sentences and striving characters resonate as much today as they did when first written in the 1970s and early 80s . . . one of American literature’s rising stars.»
<font face="verdana, tahoma"><span>Sarah Hughes</span></font>, iNews
«Throughout her work, Howland’s great theme is the shared ache of human existence, a commonality that sometimes unites us, but more often divides and isolates. She captures this paradoxical push-pull between the longing and the resistance to connect in a wide range of settings and characters, but most poignantly within herself, and most dramatically among the members of her large, multigenerational Jewish family.»
<font face="verdana, tahoma"><span>Diane Cole</span></font>, New York Jewish Week