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Loading... Tyrants: Storiesby Marshall N. Klimasewiski
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I hated “Nobile's Airship,” the first chapter in Marshall N. Klimasewiski's collection of short stories, Tyrants, and put off reading the rest of the book because of it. It wasn't necessarily because of the writing, which I found to be quite good, but rather the fact that I had zero interest in the subject matter and found the story very hard to follow. Luckily the stories became much more interesting to me as the book progressed. “The Third House” tells the story of a man and his relationship, or lack thereof, with his fiance and her parents. “Some Thrills” is about a father who brings his adolescent son along on his rendezvous with other women. “The Last Time I Saw Richard” is about a man who impregnates women who are desperate to have babies but have no other prospects. “Tyrants” is the story of a woman who is sent to work for Stalin and finds herself falling in love with him despite her grim mission. The last page or so of this story really haunted me. Next are three tales about the same couple: “Tanner and Jun Hee,” “Tanner,” and “Jun Hee.” Klimasewiski did a great job of writing about the things that couples often leave unsaid and of Jun Hee's struggle between her modern life in the United States and the more traditional life of Korea. The final story, “Aeronauts,” is about balloon travel and although I did not dislike it as much as “Nobile's Airship,” both stories were less than stellar bookends to an otherwise wonderful collection. Klimasewiski is a wonderful story-teller and is excellent at developing characters. If you enjoy plot-driven books I wouldn't recommend this, but this is a excellent example of a book that is character-driven yet does not become tedious. I would definitely pick up another one of Klimasewiski's books provided it was more like the middle chapters than the first and last. Klimasewiski's stories capture the everyday details of relationships that are at once precariously intimate and coldly detached. Their characters do not incite emotional involvement on the part of the reader, but the unsettling situations in which they find themselves do. Marshall Klimasewiski stories have a psychological edge to them not often found in such a young writer. The stories are varied in style and voice (he writes wonderfully from a woman's point of view). Two flat-out amazing stories stand out. The title story and "Some Thrills" which reads like Fitzgerald shot through with Salinger. Writ large with terrifying wonder of youth. The first story in this wonderful collection, NOBILE'S AIRSHIP evoked the solitude and loneliness of the Pole. The feeling of natural beauty and eeriness lingers satisfyingly long after you read the story. While the writing can be clumsy at times the stories are compelling. no reviews | add a review
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The good: Klimasewiski explores the quiet, unspoken space around relationships better than anyone I have read recently. His ability to pick up on, and successfully narrate, those moments in the slipstream make me more than optimistic about his future writing. (