About the Author:
This collection of short stories, originally published by Houghton Mifflin in 1990, is Rachel Simon's first book. She later became nationally known for her bestselling memoir, Riding The Bus With My Sister, and New York Times bestseller, The Story of Beautiful Girl. The seeds of those later books are apparent in these stories, some of which were adapted for the stage, NPR, and the Lifetime Channel.
From Publishers Weekly:
This distinctive, often arresting debut collection of stories marks its author as a writer to watch. In 16 tales, Simon displays an original and provocative style. With a dark humor that often plunges her characters into surreal circumstances, she evokes a Blue Velvet type of skewed Americana. In "Paint," a teenage girl allows herself to be painted, literally, from head to toe. In the title story, an elderly couple contrives to actually dream the same dream. In "Grandma Death," an old woman's propensity for discovering bodies and witnessing fatal accidents leads her to the brink of an isolated reality. In "Afterglow," a captive burglar seems to present the ideal solution to the muddle created by a teenager's faked pregnancy; in "Since Nanna Came to Stay," a child's perceptions are fused with those of her dotty and conniving grandmother. All the stories are as much about the startling interior life of the mind as they are about the superficiality of order and reason. Thoughtful and inspired, Simon's is an impressive, coherent and contemporary (in the best sense) new voice.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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