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Returning to his mythological Falls, North Carolina home of Widow, the author presents three novellas set in today's South, a place revolutionized around freer sexuality, looser family ties and superior telecommunications.

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5 reviews
I had heard great things about Gurganus so I thought his latest would be a good introduction. He uses the small town of Falls, North Carolina as the backdrop for 3 novellas. His prose is excellent and the stories have good creativity and a sly black humor. I especially liked "Saints Have Mothers" about a mother with a perfect teenage daughter which she may or may not love. The last story "Decoy" was the longest and the length is what hurt it. I think it could have conveyed the same story in less pages, but ultimately it was a good commentary about friendship and growing old. This is a good read, but not sure if I will go back and read his earlier stuff, but instead I will see what he produces in the future.
½
When I picked this one up from my library, I didn't realize it was a set of novellas. I haven't read many novellas, but the ones I have have been tough. I think it's kind of an awkward form -- long enough to feel a little too long but not long enough to feel like a big hearty novel you can really get into. It's like the awkward teenager phase of fiction that nobody really wants to be all that much involved with.

The first two in this collection of three, and a good half of the third, fell pretty flat for me. The words and sentences were good, but the stories didn't do much for me. They didn't seem to have much emotional freight, and so they seemed oddly sized curiosities, little exercises in building a sense of place and maybe a little show more sense of character. But of course knowing that the story would be chopped off pretty soon after the development had built, I had trouble really connecting with either the fictional town of Falls or its inhabitants.

Well into the final novella, Decoy, after the catastrophe that basically bifurcates the thing, the piece took a turn for the better for me, and I thought the last 20 - 30 pages were good. But, 30 pages out of 300 make for pretty slim pickings, so it's not one I'd suggest.
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I happen to like Gurganus as a writer but I don't agree with the rave reviews for this book of three novellas. I with great effort got through the first one and simply couldn't go any further. It didn't seem to be worth my effort.
I immediately lost interest in the first story. I tried to get through the second, but failed. I found the narrator's voice both unconvincing, annoying and uninteresting. The story of a perfect, saintly child just seemed too far removed from reality to hold my interest. I just didn't get the point.

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30+ Works 2,951 Members
In 1966, as a conscientious objector faced with possible charges of draft evasion during the Vietnam War, Allan Gurganus found himself on a four-year tour as a message decoder on an aircraft carrier. While at sea, Gurganus, who had studied to be a painter, developed the idea for his first successful novel, Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All show more (1989) after reading an article that described how Confederate veterans were granted pensions in the 1880s, making them prime marital candidates for much younger women. The novel features Lucy Marsden, a feisty ninety-nine-year-old North Carolina widow, and spans the 1850s to the 1980s. Gurganus's subsequent books include Blessed Assurance: A Moral Tale (1989), The Practical Heart (1993), and Plays Well With Others (1997). He has written a number of short stories that have appeared in periodicals such as Granta, The New York Times, The New Yorker, Harper's, and Paris Review, and in books such as The Faber Book of Short Gay Fiction (1991). Eleven of his short stories are collected in The White People (1991). Gurganus was born in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, in 1947 and graduated from Sarah Lawrence College (B.A., 1972) and the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop (M.F.A., 1974). He has taught fiction writing at University of Iowa, Stanford University, Duke University, Sarah Lawrence College and the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop, and has had his paintings displayed in many private and public collections. (Bowker Author Biography) Allan Gurganus lives in a small town in North Carolina. The title novella of this book won the National Magazine Prize, & his other honors include the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the Southern Book Prize, & the Sue Kaufman Prize from the American Academy of Arts & Letters. (Publisher Provided) show less

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
2013-09-23
Important places
Falls, North Carolina
Epigraph
French provincial towns are about like what your hometown was when your father was a boy, before movies, the radio and the family car changed all that. Your father wasn't bored. Neither are the provincial French. -- Instru... (show all)ctions for American servicemen in France, World War II, issued by the U.S. Army
I did the best I could with what I had -- Joe Louis
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)For the novella Decoy:
See, that is why I value this. See, that is why I've waited.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, LGBTQ+
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3557 .U814 .A6Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
171
Popularity
190,648
Reviews
5
Rating
½ (3.63)
Languages
English, French, Italian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
7
ASINs
2