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Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters; Seymour - an Introduction
Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters; Seymour - an Introduction
Oct 27, 2024 4:33 AM

Author:J. D. Salinger

Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters; Seymour - an Introduction

A haunting portrait of family tragedy from the acclaimed author of The Catcher in the Rye

'He was a great many things to a great many people while he lived, and virtually all things to his brothers and sisters in our somewhat outsized family. Surely he was all real things to us: our blue-striped unicorn, our double-lensed burning glass, our consultant genius, our portable conscience, our supercargo, and our one full poet...'

These two novellas, set seventeen years apart, are both concerned with Seymour Glass - the eldest son of J. D. Salinger's fictional Glass family - as recalled by his closest brother, Buddy.

'The Glasses are one of the liveliest, funniest, most fully-realized families in all fiction' The New York Times

Reviews

A masterful contemporary exponent of the genre. Simpson now deserves to be compared with Flannery O'Connor and Alice Munro

—— Robert McCrum , Observer

Simpson's use of language is remarkable: she handles prose with the risky precision of a trapeze artist, swooping and tumbling through empty air, seeming certain at moments to succumb to whimsy or sentimentality but at the last moment recovering her grasp on the deftly constructed framework of her narratives. It's a virtuoso performance; its effect on the reader both consoling and exhilarating

—— Jane Shilling , Sunday Telegraph

She is a virtuoso... Briskly melancholic, dazzlingly pertinent short stories about women's lives and how they survive

—— Sunday Times

Subtle, emotional, humorous, painful and acute... It's a small masterpiece

—— Independent

The brilliance of the conceits and the complex economy that shapes the best of these tales, match and surpass any of Helen Simpson's earlier writing

—— Stevie Davies , Guardian

Together with the biting humour, there is aching sadness and real tenderness, making this collection up there with the best of this genre

—— Michelle Stanistreet , Sunday Express

Constitutional is Helen Simpson fourth collection of short stories and shows some fine developments in one of the Short Story forms more accomplished practitioners

—— Helen Simpson , NB

The God I want to believe in has a voice and sense of humor like Denis Johnson’s.

—— Jonathan Franzen

Our most poetic short story writer since Hemingway.

—— George Saunders

The great energy of his imagination was a fusion of honesty and seriousness, pain and laughter. His life was a thing of moment and urgency, pure and undistracted.

—— Marilynne Robinson

Prose of amazing power and stylishness.

—— Philip Roth

When Denis Johnson is justly praised for his voice, I always think, just the one? He has an eerie symphony at his command.

—— Karen Russell

Denis Johnson was and is and will continue to be one of our strongest writers. His work has an indigenous beat that marks it as unmistakably American.

—— Don DeLillo

Denis Johnson was and is, without question, significant and great.

—— Michael Cunningham

Everyone who reads Denis Johnson comes away thinking he has spoken directly to some wracked and ragged, yet transcendent, aspect of their own secret heart.

—— Louise Erdrich

His prose tiptoes a tightrope between peace and calamity.

—— Anthony Doerr

Nobody wrote with more brutality and mercy, more hilarity and grace. What a genius he was.

—— Elizabeth McCracken

[Denis Johnson’s] writing is life enhancing, like being suddenly hit by a marvellous trick of the light. I urge you to read this. I can’t imagine anyone with any kind of sensitivity to words or people not enjoying it.

—— Jane Graham , Big Issue

Blistering, brilliant.

—— Jeffrey Eugenides

A true American artist ... a revelator for this still new century.

—— New York Times

A dizzying mix of humour and near tragedy that leaves us unsure whether to laugh or weep… For too long, Denis Johnson was not sufficiently appreciated. A fine novelist and poet, as well as one of the best short story writers of his generation.

—— John Burnside , Spectator

An instant classic…A masterpiece of deep humanity and astonishing prose…. It's filled with Johnson's unparalleled ability to inject humor, profundity, and beauty—often all three—into the dark and the mundane alike. These characters have been pushed toward the edge; through their searches for meaning or clawing just to hold onto life, Johnson is able to articulate what it means to be alive, and to have hope.

—— Publishers Weekly (starred review)

Like a good rock song, a typical Denis Johnson sentence describes, with total precision, what an emotion feels like … Johnson has sometimes been compared to Ernest Hemingway for his creation of a distinctive American idiom.

—— Jamie Fisher , Times Literary Supplement

Denis Johnson was the best American writer of the past twenty-five years.

—— New Republic

He was the kind of writer who comes along once in a generation, if that often: a true original, in the same league as Melville and Whitman.

—— n+1

Here are stories that feel generously improvised but never haphazard, uncanny but earthy, reconciled to the passing of time but themselves out of time. Few books so relentlessly concerned with death feel so relentlessly alive.

—— Colin Barrett

Denis Johnson writes short stories like no one has ever done before. He makes the normal electric; the everyday enormous. There is not a single word here that does not hit you square in the face and say: look, this is what it's about, this is what you need to know.

—— Daisy Johnson

Denis Johnson’s stories are astonishingthey dash between quicksilver wit and gallows humour, twinning the superficial with the profound so elegantly. His sentences are exquisite, often having the capacity to sock a sudden punch. The last story made me gasp.

—— Kerry Andrew

[An] absorbing collection of deceptively rambling, craftily casual tales ... Magical stuff.

—— Dan Brotzel , Irish News **Book of the Week**

Sometimes streetwise and tough, and always informal, light, elegant and miraculously tender.

—— Gavin Corbett , Irish Times

The late Denis Johnson is arguably the most influential American prose writer of the last thirty years ... and in the posthumously published The Largess of the Sea Maiden it is blindingly clear why.

—— John Patrick McHugh , Totally Dublin

The five darkly comic stories that comprise The Largesse of the Sea Maiden are befitting final testaments to [Johnson’s] wild originality... His sentences, like his plots, are full of gorgeous little shocks.

—— Irish Independent, *The best reads of 2018: Our critics name their top picks*

How to sum up? It's... mind-blowing. Seriously. A lifetime book

—— Ralf Webb , White Review, *Books of the Year*

[You Know You Want This captures] the torturous and complicated justifications for untoward behaviour in the search for closeness and connection.

—— Eithne Farry , Daily Mail

What unites the collection is less her [Roupenian’s] gender politics than her interest in the way fantasies become distorted, disappointing, even dangerous when they approach reality… narrative twist[s] changes the direction of a story and leads it somewhere new. Roupenian’s desire to have her moral and reject it too could be said to put a twist on the twist.

—— Lauren Oyler , London Review of Books

Roupenian remains rooted in realism, she gives pause by exposing the sinister side of sexuality, and one looks forward to seeing what she might accomplish with the novel form.

—— Mia Levitin , Financial Times

Kristen Roupenian's debut short stories fulfil all expectations… she infuses mundane reality with a thrilling layer of menace.

—— Emily Rhodes , Spectator

One of the most anticipated story collections of the year.

—— Elle

Violence, cruelty or misunderstanding are never far away in these 12 stories, which are by turns, unsettling, ruthless and often funny.

—— UK Press Syndication

Walker’s laconic, Hemingway-esque prose style perfectly complements his low-key approach to his material: the matter-of-fact tone in which he recalls his most horrific experiences in Iraq makes them seem all the more horrible. It works equally well with deadpan humour.

—— Jake Kerridge , Sunday Times

Roupenian is a wizard of provocative, psychological fiction, exploring the dark side of the human psyche. Each of her short stories is terrifyingly relatable, making the reader fear something much more relevant than more supernatural horror stories.

—— The Mancunion

A fascinating and repugnant series of stories, all tremendous examples of what this unsung hero of a literary form can do.

—— Culture Calling

Roupenian’s wildly discomfiting new collection, You Know You Want This… is often wonderfully, if grotesquely, physical… This book isn’t bedtime reading.

—— Ruth Franklin , New York Review of Books

These are stories that make you feel fascinated but repelled, scared but delighted, revolted but aroused.

—— Glamour

You Know You Want This is an alarming but compelling book. Roupenian’s short stories, weaving together science fiction, confession and fantasy, are like infections spreading across the senses, blocking out everything except the compulsion to read on… Roupenian achieves something few other writers have: providing a balanced reflection on a very difficult subject.

—— Ella Whelan , Spiked

A new collection of stories that explores the complex - and often darkly funny - connections between gender, sex, and power across genres.

—— The Week, *Summer reads of 2019*
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