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Hardcover The Ice at the Bottom of the World Book

ISBN: 0394564855

ISBN13: 9780394564852

The Ice at the Bottom of the World

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

In these ten stories, Mark Richard, winner of the 1990 PEN/Ernest Hemingway Foundation Award, emerges as the heir apparent to Mark Twain, Flannery O'Connor, and William Faulkner. From the Trade Paperback edition.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A Rave Review

Richard is a virtuoso, a master of the craft. The first piece in the collection sets a high expectation that is fully satisfied with the writing that follows. Here are stories about the south with voices as clear as daylight. There are familiar landscapes of the south: a small cabin near the river as in "Her Favorite Story" and a farmhouse as in "Strays." This modern landscape grows, too, to include the suburbs as in "This is Us, Excellent." There is a haunting simplicity found in Richard's characters. They live life without the fear that perhaps they should have. A sense of dramatic irony grows in the reader as if it were a play inside a theater. All of these stories are freighted with disappointment, marred by traged, or terrorized by old ghosts and various wants. There is a resigned sorrow througout and the feeling that doom is not far off like a dark cloud moving in from a distance. What is deeply moving here is that many of the characers do not anticipate change. They do not even seem aware of it or of hope. Instead, dead things rise to the surface as in "On the Rope" where a former flood rescue worker glimpses a plastic bag caught on a fence and is brought back to memories of the "boiling waters" that drowned the town. The immediate sorrows are understated either by voice or events that follow so that in a way, the immediate pain is cauterized. But once we look away from the wound we realize the whole body has gone with runny sores and rot. Richard's stories speak loudly about doom, decay, and seemingly incongruous naivete in the same fashion as Steinback in The Grapes of Wrath and Faulkner in The Sound and The Fury. What may be perhaps most disturbing here in all the lyrical prose and landscape is that the people do not change-- they are immobile like statues. What changes life then is only the inevitable event that is death.

Beautiful, haunting Southern short stories...

I loved reading this collection of short stories. The stories are dark, haunting, beautiful, and some even heartwarming. Mark Richard's stories are quite similar to Faulkner's work in that they are set in the South and have a gothic, no-nonsense quality to them that make them unforgettable. Richard's voice is one of brutal honesty, and I found myself nodding in agreement with various passages. My favorite stories are "Happiness of the Garden Variety," "The Ice at the Bottom of the World," "On the Rope," "The Theory of Man," and "Strays." The one bad thing about this collection is its lack of popularity. I cannot believe that such a beautiful book could go almost unnoticed, but that is often the case with true literary offerings. I feel bad enough that it took me ten years to give this collection a whirl. Mark Richard is a brilliant storyteller and I would have liked it if he had written other works. I shall give this wonderful piece of work all the word of mouth it deserves.

Richard is one of the best

Bravo to the previous customer, but I would like to add a collection to his list from a writer in his own back yard. Fred Chappell's "More Shapes Than One" has the range and humor of any collection ever set to paper. Mark Richard and Thom Jones define the contemporary short story as William Trevor and Peter Taylor did a generation before them. Taylor is another Greensboro boy to add to the list. Anyway, Strays, the first story in Richard's collection is as fine a story as a man could write and I use it as a high water mark for my own scribblings. As to the TV wasteland you condemn America to be wallowing in, Richard now lives in L.A. and writes for a TV show if I'm not mistaken.

1 of the 10 Great Story Collections of the late 20th Century

The other nine are Allan Gurganus' "White People;" Lorrie Moore's "Like Life;" William Vollmann's "Rainbow Stories;" Robert Olen Butler's "Good Scent from a Strange Mountain;" Lewis Nordan's "Sugar Among the Freaks;" Walter Mosley's "Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned;" William Trevor's "Collected Stories;" Thom Jones' "Pugilist at Rest" and all of A. S. Byatt's stories. Mark Richard has talents that are so profound they transcend quantification or qualification, and if we continue to neglect great writers--such as Richard--into oblivion by declining their generous and gracious gifts in favor of the tv or other numbstruck visual entertainments, we deserve the perceptual pabulum we consume and the distrophy of our hearts and brains that will surely accompany such suspect diets. Buy this book today. If you don't agree with me, send me an e-mail and tell me why.....END
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