The American Wife

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University of Michigan Press, 2007 M10 15 - 182 páginas

“Elaine Ford’s collection roams the territory between the intellect and the heart. She writes of the human condition with precision, in language that is both grave and conversational. Her characters step out of the real world onto the page, where she develops them quietly, but with compassionate fullness. This writer grips the reader with her keen knowledge of the psyche of individuals-—their motives and secrets—and also with the surprising things that happen to them.”
—Laura Kasischke, judge, Michigan Literary Fiction Awards

Of Elaine Ford’s novel, Missed Connections, the Washington Post wrote that it is a work “of small episodes, of precise sentences, of unusual clarity.” That same clarity proves an unsettling force in Ford’s stories, where precision of prose often belies uncertainties hidden beneath. In the title piece, an American woman in England, embroiled in a relationship doomed to fail, discovers how little she understands about her own desires and impulses. In another story, another American wife, abandoned in Greece by her archaeologist husband, struggles to solve a crime no one else believes to have been committed.

Throughout her stories Ford touches on the mysteries that make up our lives. Each story in itself is a masterpiece of such detail and power as to transform the way we see the world.

 

Contenido

The Garage Artist
1
Dyslexia
24
Levitation
40
The Scow
73
The American Wife
87
Red Woman Black Woman
102
Reaping Tares
129
The Life of the Mind
144
NerveWrackin Christmas
163
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Elaine Ford was born in White Plains, New York on December 12, 1938. She received a bachelor's degree from Harvard University in 1964. Her first novel, The Playhouse, was published in 1980. Her other novels include Monkey Bay, Missed Connections, Ivory Bright, and Life Designs. Her short-story collections include The American Wife and This Time Might Be Different: Stories from Maine. The couple moved to Maine in 1985, and Ms. Ford began She taught creative writing and literature at the University of Maine at Orono from 1985 until her retirement in 2005. She died of a brain tumor on August 27, 2017 at the age of 78.

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