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Back in the World : Stories (Vintage Contemporaries)

Back in the World : Stories (Vintage Contemporaries)

List Price: $12.00
Your Price: $9.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: More from the best
Review: As if "The Night In Question" wasn't good enough, I went and bought "Back In The World." Just the first story alone could be printed ten times in between two covers and you'll read it different every time. There is this girl who likes to shop lift, works in a theatre, goes home to her little brother. It's us, beautifully written and immaculately realized. Tobias Wolff is gold and everything he touches turns just the same. Read this, then "The Night In Question" and then read "This Boy's Life." Read his made up words and then read his personally inspired words and found out just what he had to go through, how he triumphed over adversities to become the best short story writer out there today.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Modern American Short Story Masterpiece
Review: As if "The Night In Question" wasn't good enough, I went and bought "Back In The World." Just the first story alone could be printed ten times in between two covers and you'll read it different every time. There is this girl who likes to shop lift, works in a theatre, goes home to her little brother. It's us, beautifully written and immaculately realized. Tobias Wolff is gold and everything he touches turns just the same. Read this, then "The Night In Question" and then read "This Boy's Life." Read his made up words and then read his personally inspired words and found out just what he had to go through, how he triumphed over adversities to become the best short story writer out there today.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Painterly
Review: In these stories Tobias Wolff is wonderful at portraying moments in human life. After years of not reading much short fiction, this book turned me back onto short stories -- it's still one of the collections of short stories I like most. Wonderful.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Interesting stories cover a wide range of human experiences
Review: In this short story collection, author Tobias Wolff utilizes his excellent narrative style to describe a wide range of people in a variety of different experiences. For example, we see a husband and wife having a disagreement which turns ugly, a group of four friends each reflecting back on their finest hour, and the tension between two brothers of opposing circumstances. Many of the stories have negative undertones, and themes of infidelity, drug use, and crime are rampant.

I found these stories to be interesting and engaging, which I attribute largely to Wolff's skill in creating memorable characters. Ultimately, however, I became frustrated with the incompleteness of each tale, as I was left wanting more. Wolff tends to hint at certain plot twists--such as the possibility of an affair or sexual perversion--without ever offering any confirmation. If you enjoy stories which rely on the imagination of the reader more than the imagination of the writer, you are likely to find greater appreciation of what this book has to offer.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Portraits of People Who Live Too Much in Their Heads
Review: These are great stories, complex psychological studies, all woven into page-turning narratives by a writer who doesn't write to show off his linguistic skills (of which he has many), but to get the reader completely absorbed by the stories without being distracted by verbosity and other annoyances writers too often use to gain attraction for themselves. Wolff is too profound a writer to rely on gimmicks of any kind. Here are some highlights of the collection:

"The Rich Brother": Two brothers, one rich and arrogant, the other a poor drifter, both blame each other for their problems when in fact both are blind to their own pride and their own neediness which makes them need to rival against the other as a distraction from their empty lives.

"Desert Breakdown, 1968": A spoiled brat, now married to a beautiful pregnant woman, has fantasies of leaving his wife to be a single hedonist. He also loathes his parents who have spoiled and enabled him all his life. His delusions catch up with him in a way that I'll leave for the reader to discover in this excellent story.

"The Missing Person": A spiritual cousin to the drifting brother in "The Rich Brother," Leo is a waif afraid of women who sublimates his fears by joining the priesthood where, in an ironic twist, he meets a Trickster and becomes a corrupt hustler upon which, through too many twists of events to chronicle here, he finds his real self.

"Say Yes": A naive young house wife realizes that her husband is a racist and that racism can't be compartmentalized. His racist views contaminate all other aspects of his personality and he must therefore re-invent himself or suffer his wife's contempt and perhaps worse.

These stories are mostly gems, wrought with irony, tales of folly, people's misguided attempts at redemption, predatory tricksters wreaking havoc on the lives of others. His best stories are more richly packed with themes and ideas than most novels.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: one good book
Review: This book is great. What else would you expect from Mr. Wolff. I find his stories refreshingly unique. This man could write about getting your oil-changed and make it interesting. This is a must read for anyone interested in the works of the so-called "Dirty Realists." Also read Ford's Rock Springs and anything you can get a hold of by Raymond Carver. These men write about our lives, not the lives we all wish we had. Wolff is an in-your-face writer that punches home all his points with clear language and just hard writing. Also check out In The Garden of the North American Martyrs and The Night in Question--other collections of his.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: one good book
Review: This book is great. What else would you expect from Mr. Wolff. I find his stories refreshingly unique. This man could write about getting your oil-changed and make it interesting. This is a must read for anyone interested in the works of the so-called "Dirty Realists." Also read Ford's Rock Springs and anything you can get a hold of by Raymond Carver. These men write about our lives, not the lives we all wish we had. Wolff is an in-your-face writer that punches home all his points with clear language and just hard writing. Also check out In The Garden of the North American Martyrs and The Night in Question--other collections of his.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Modern American Short Story Masterpiece
Review: With his second collection of short stories, Tobias Wolff delivers literature even more penetrating than In the Garden of North American Martyrs. Wolff has a genuinely sharp eye for the intricacies of human lives. Every story in Back in the World is unique and moving. The subject matter ranges from teenage life, to war stories, to realistic slices of everday life. The endings of the stories often come out of nowhere, yet they have the precise amount of impact to satisfy the reader. I strongly recommend this book to anyone, especially those who have never read Wolff before.


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