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Memorable Effects
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17215 |
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BOOK WORLD
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2 / 1990 |
1,858 Words |
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George Garrett George Garrett is the Henry Hoyns Professor of Creative
Writing at the University of Virginia. He has written numerous
short story and poetry collections and novels, his latest
being Entered From the Sun. In 1989 he received the T.S. Eliot
Award and more recently, the PEN/Faulkner Bernard Malamud
Award for Short Fiction. |
THE INVISIBLE ENEMY
Alcoholism and the Modern Short Story
Edited by Miriam Dow and Jennifer Regan
St. Paul: Greywolf Press, 1989
241 pp., $9.50
Despite of its textbook title and subtitle and its official ISBN listing under "Literature/Chemical Dependency," this handsome book is, in fact, and anthology of short fiction, part of the worthy Graywolf Short Fiction series. It consists of fifteen American short stories by a variety of writers. The earliest is Frank O'Connor's "Christmas Morning," first published in1946; the most recent Robert Stone's "Helping," which first appeared in the New Yorker in 1987. The collection is dedicated to the late Raymond Carver, whose well-known story "Where I'm Calling From" (1983) is included; and the striking painting used as the cover image is identified as Poema de Omar, by Oscar Rodriguez, from the collection of Carver's window - poet and story writer Tess Gallagher.
The two editors identify themselves in the biographical notes as recovering alcoholics. In addition to selecting the stories for The Invisible Enemy and arranging them in five sections - "The Family and Alcoholism," "Children," "Progression," "Delusions," and "Trying to Stop" - the editors offer a brief introduction making a case for the possible social value of their anthology as part of a larger movement against the conventional "tolerance of alcohol abuse." They argue that the book has a special value:
“Although the abundance of information now
... (1999 of 10851 Characters)
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