From the publisher
Lorrie Moore is the author of the story collections Birds of America, Like Life, and Self-Help and the novels Who Will Run the Frog Hospital? and Anagrams. Her work has won honors from the Lannan Foundation and the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as well as the Irish Times International Prize for Fiction, the Rea Award for the Short Story, and the PEN/Malamud Award. She is a professor of English at the University of Wisconsin in Madison.
Details
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Title
Bark: Stories
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Author
Lorrie Moore
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Binding
Hardback
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Edition
First Edition; F
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Pages
192
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Language
EN
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Publisher
Doubleday Canada
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Date
2014-02-25
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ISBN
9780385682343
Media reviews
“No admirer of Moore’s will go away either overloaded or unsatisfied, and it lets us contemplate and savor just what makes her work unique. . . . A sense of dread both aesthetically satisfying, and deeply scary.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Its stories tend to feel like easily consumed entertainments, with intimations at wisdom and meaning just compelling enough to keep us reading. . . . She can be a master of irony, using it to illuminate the vast gaps between people, between language and understanding, and what deep sadness persists in those spaces.”
—The Globe and Mail
“Her unerring ear for the way modern Americans speak, her uncanny ability to flip from belly laughs to deep unease and back again, often so fast that you have to stop and take stock of your reactions—carry the day.”
—The Windsor Star
“Few writers so adroitly expose the nuances and absurdities of modern life as Lorrie Moore. It’s a talent on full display in “Foes,” one of eight tales in Moore’s much-anticipated new short-story collection.”
—Maclean’s
“Insightful snapshots exploring post-9/11 life in the U.S. Her tales are a pithy commentary on the more irrational elements of the American psyche as the country struggles to redefine itself after the attack. . . . Full of wanting, anxiety and regret—and that makes for the best kind of story.”
—Chatelaine
“Gaunt, splendid…What an irresistible bunch of characters she conjures up…We still need Lorrie Moore to work hard at making us laugh, to remind us that we’re frauds, we’re all just acting. To unzip words for us and let their sounds and meanings and pun potentialities jingle out like coins. To point out the silver linings…She never lies to us. She never tells us the water’s fine. She says, Dive in anyway, “swim among the dying” while you can. Learn how to suffer in style.”
—Parul Seghal, Bookforum
“The short form is her true forte. Her talent is best exhibited in the collection’s longest stories (each around 40 pages); her comfort with that length is indicated by her careful avoidance of overplotting, which, of course, dulls the effect of an expansive short story, and by not allowing the stories to seem like the outlines of novels that never got developed.”
—Booklist (Starred Review)
“One of the best short story writers in America resumes her remarkable balancing act, with a collection that is both hilarious and heartbreaking, sometimes in the same paragraph…In stories both dark and wry, Moore wields a scalpel with surgical precision.”
—Kirkus (Starred Review)
“These stories are laugh-out-loud funny, as well as full of pithy commentary on contemporary life and politics.”
—Publisher’s Weekly (Starred Review)
“The glory of Moore’s writing isn’t simply that it toys with our expectations; it is that—like life itself—it turns them on their heads and gives them a good hard shake. . . . A long time in coming, Bark is a reminder—if one was needed—that when it comes to writing stories, Moore is still ahead of the pack.”
—The Star
“Untroubled, overlong, by tragedy or politics, the stories in Bark are given ample time to focus on the intriguing minutiae of fragmenting relationships . . . all couched in complex, carefully layered prose. Moore's latest cocktail is a stimulating, heady mix short-story lovers will want to get their hands on double-quick.”
—Winnipeg Free Press
“It’s Moore’s variations, some subtle, some pointed, that imbue [her stories] with intriguing layers of significance. . . . [A] powerful collection about the difficulty of letting go of love.”
—The Seattle Times
“Moore once again brings her acute intelligence and wit to play….The language has a fizzy rhythm that will have the reader turning the pages. Smart, funny, and overlaid with surprising metaphor…Highly recommended.”
—Library Journal (Starred Review)
About the author
Lorrie Moore is the author of the story collections Birds of America, Like Life, and Self-Help and the novels Who Will Run the Frog Hospital? and Anagrams. Her work has won honors from the Lannan Foundation and the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as well as the Irish Times International Prize for Fiction, the Rea Award for the Short Story, and the PEN/Malamud Award. She is a professor of English at the University of Wisconsin in Madison.