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Russell Banks (1940–2023)

Author of Cloudsplitter

38+ Works 10,932 Members 299 Reviews 38 Favorited

About the Author

The oldest of four children, Russell Banks spent his childhood and adolescence in New Hampshire and Eastern Massachusetts. His blue collar, working class background is strongly reflected in his writing. The first in his family to attend college, Banks studied at Colgate University and later show more graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of North Carolina, at Chapel Hill. While he was establishing himself as a writer, Banks spent time as a plumber, shoe salesman, and a window dresser. Banks's titles include Searching for Survivors, Family Life, Hamilton Stark, The New World, The Book of Jamaica, Trailerpark, The Relation of My Imprisonment, Continental Drift, Success Stories, Affliction, The Sweet Hereafter and Dreaming Up America. Banks has also written numerous poems, stories, and essays. Banks is the recipient of several awards and prizes. Among his accolades are the St. Lawrence Award for Short Fiction, the John Dos Passos Award, and the Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. In 1986, Continental Drift was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Works by Russell Banks

Cloudsplitter (1998) 1,665 copies
The Sweet Hereafter (1991) 1,661 copies
Rule of the Bone (1995) 1,421 copies
Continental Drift (1985) 985 copies
Affliction (1989) 890 copies
The Darling (2004) 809 copies
Lost Memory of Skin (2011) 790 copies
The Reserve (2007) 673 copies
Trailerpark (1981) 249 copies
Foregone (2021) 136 copies
The Magic Kingdom (2022) 127 copies
Success Stories (1986) 122 copies
Book of Jamaica (1980) 121 copies

Associated Works

The Bridge of San Luis Rey (1927) — Foreword, some editions — 4,776 copies
The Story and Its Writer: An Introduction to Short Fiction (1983) — Contributor — 1,134 copies
A Walk on the Wild Side (1956) — Foreword, some editions — 640 copies
Unholy Ghost: Writers on Depression (2001) — Contributor — 493 copies
Birthday Stories (2002) — Contributor — 456 copies
Sudden Fiction: American Short-Short Stories (1984) — Contributor — 363 copies
Montreal Stories (2003) — Introduction, some editions — 257 copies
The Best American Travel Writing 2001 (2001) — Contributor — 236 copies
Bad Trips (1991) — Contributor — 233 copies
The Best American Short Stories of the 80s (1990) — Contributor — 163 copies
The Best American Mystery Stories 2001 (2001) — Contributor — 145 copies
The Ecco Anthology of Contemporary American Short Fiction (2008) — Contributor — 126 copies
Beneath the Roses (2005) — Contributor — 102 copies
Prize Stories 2000: The O. Henry Awards (2000) — Contributor — 97 copies
The Best American Mystery Stories 2014 (2014) — Contributor — 93 copies
It Occurs to Me That I Am America: New Stories and Art (2018) — Contributor — 72 copies
The Best American Short Stories 1985 (1985) — Contributor — 61 copies
The Sweet Hereafter [1997 film] (1998) — Original book — 40 copies
Antaeus No. 75/76, Autumn 1994 - The Final Issue (1994) — Contributor — 32 copies
New Stories from the South 2002: The Year's Best (2002) — Contributor — 31 copies
The Best American Short Stories 1971 (1971) — Contributor — 21 copies
The Best American Short Stories 1975 (1975) — Contributor — 15 copies
New American Review #4 (1968) — Contributor — 14 copies
The Hurly Burly and Other Stories (2021) — Preface, some editions; Editor, some editions — 9 copies
Speed: Stories of Survival from Behind the Wheel (2002) — Contributor — 6 copies
Race Traitor 10 (1999) — Contributor — 4 copies
Fire Exit, 4 — Contributor — 1 copy
Christmas 1968: 14 poets — Contributor — 1 copy
Hearse #15 (1971) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

20th century (139) American (188) American fiction (103) American literature (352) anthology (557) books (72) books about books (125) classic (97) classics (110) collection (67) depression (70) essays (269) fiction (2,985) first edition (91) Florida (59) historical fiction (279) history (70) John Brown (70) literary fiction (65) literature (464) mystery (79) non-fiction (280) novel (440) own (77) Peru (188) psychology (60) Pulitzer (77) Pulitzer Prize (108) read (195) Roman (60) short fiction (63) short stories (857) short story (59) signed (62) South America (67) to-read (966) travel (214) unread (145) USA (130) writing (243)

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Reviews

Continental Drift is a powerful book dealing that shows how some of the worst and most exploitive experiences that humans have are born from the trivial failures of imperfect people. Many of the people in this book are hugely flawed and only partly evil. Yet their actions and desperation when magnified by the relentless drive for profit on all things that is capitalism generate absolute horrors and destroy lives and spirits. A book like this should is so important especially now when so many advocates of social justice imagine that people can just "envision the good they want to be" and that that will be enough.… (more)
 
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EthanMiller | 23 other reviews | Mar 30, 2024 |
A book that stops you in your tracks. Banks handles an amazing range of narrators with amazing deftness.

Nothing about grief is simple. For people, families, or communities. Banks writes it all here.
 
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Zonderpaard | 34 other reviews | Feb 20, 2024 |
This book is comprised of three dark short stories/novellas written by the late Russell Banks. He passed away in 2023; a loss to American literature. The stories all take place in Sam Dent, a once bustling, now forgotten, decaying town in upstate New York.

My reaction after reading the first story was “Wow…Just wow.” What a great writer. Banks captures well the struggles of people who feel marginalized, the culture that has made a cult hero out of a con man former entertainer and president of the United States and the hate and vitriol that characterizes our current social/political climate as well as the devastating effects of that vitriol.

While the title American Spirits refers to the brand of cigarettes smoked by some of the characters, it of course is a metaphor for so much more. While reading about the sometimes horrors of everyday life may not be for everyone, I think I may have already found my favorite book of 2024.

Thanks to #netgalley and @aaknopf for the ARC.
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vkmarco | 1 other review | Jan 17, 2024 |
Thornton Wilder gave us Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire and Russell Banks gives us Sam Dent, New York. Both communities are small, rural, and isolated. Considering the three stories in Banks’ AMERICAN SPIRITS in the light of Wilder’s OUR TOWN, however, one can’t help but speculate on how the passage of time has warped our vision of America. On one hand, we have stories that focus on the comfortable quotidian, while on the other the stories force us to ponder the darkness that seems to pervade the scene today.

Sam Dent is a community founded on optimistic land speculation following the revolutionary war, but the Banks’ stories seem to suggest that the American experiment may be floundering and clearly facing existential threats.

Hostility leading to tragedy underlies each story. In “Nowhere Man” a man sells a piece of property to a survivalist who has plans to turn it into a training camp for right wing activists. It is not surprising that guns and toxic masculinity ensue with predictable tragic consequences. “Homeschooling” seems to be based on actual events recently reported in the news. A lesbian couple have adopted four at risk African American children. The women’s strangeness and stories told by their children raise the suspicions of the neighbors who intervene resulting in yet another tragedy. The back porch gossip in the Wilder play is now replaced by social media. The final novella (“Kidnapped”) is a dark story with a tangled plot involving drug deals, guns, revenge, kidnapping, and murder. This one is a little less believable than the other two, mainly because the characters seem to be untethered to reality. I think making some of the main characters descendants of the original founders of the village is revealing, however, as it suggests just how far off the rails we may have come.

Banks’ vision of America seems dark and pessimistic, yet his talent for storytelling clearly is on display in all three novellas. Despite their unrelenting darkness, these are suspenseful and compelling stories of 21st century America worthy of the late Russell Banks.
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1 vote
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ozzer | 1 other review | Dec 2, 2023 |

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Works
38
Also by
45
Members
10,932
Popularity
#2,163
Rating
3.8
Reviews
299
ISBNs
374
Languages
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Favorited
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