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Don't Cry

Stories

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Mary Gaitskill returns with a luminous new collection of stories—her first in more than ten years.

In "College Town 1980," young people adrift in Ann Arbor, Michigan, debate the meaning of personal strength at the start of the Reagan era; in the urban fairy tale "Mirror Ball," a young man steals a girl's soul during a one-night stand; and in "The Little Boy," a woman haunted by the death of her husband is finally able to grieve through a mysterious encounter with a needy child.

Each story delivers the powerful, original language and the dramatic engagement of the intelligent mind with the craving body—or of the intelligent body with the craving mind—that has come to be seen as stunningly emblematic of Gaitskill's fiction.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 26, 2009
      A grab bag of 10 stories spotlight the writhing of Gaitskill’s (Veronica
      ) listless characters within unloving landscapes. In the portrayal of a depressive 29-year-old graduate student trying to pick up her life after a shattering breakup, “College Town, 1980,” set in Ann Arbor, encapsulates the collective self-abnegation that seized America’s young on the cusp of the Reagan revolution. “The Agonized Face” is a rigorous critique of a feminist author who manipulates her audience “with her sullied, catastrophic life placed before us for the purpose of selling her.” Mostly, though, characters give in to nostalgia rather than anger, like the medical technician in “A Dream of Men” whose bittersweet memories of her dying father mingle with her ambivalence about her sexuality; or a now-married middle-aged writer’s touching encounter with a stylish former lesbian lover she had 15 years before. The title story’s protagonist, a recent widow accompanying her friend to adopt a baby in an unstable Addis Ababa, is nearly submerged by her guilt at having been once unfaithful to her husband, but like others in Gaitskill’s pristinely rendered yet joyless gallery, she finds visceral gratitude in unexpected moments.

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Languages

  • English

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