Cowboys Are My Weakness: Stories

(Author)
Available
Product Details
Price
$14.95  $13.90
Publisher
W. W. Norton & Company
Publish Date
Pages
184
Dimensions
5.4 X 8.0 X 0.6 inches | 0.3 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780393356878

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Pam Houston is the prize-winning author of Contents May Have Shifted, among other books. She is professor of English at the University of California-Davis and lives on a ranch at 9,000 feet in Colorado near the headwaters of the Rio Grande.
Reviews
In Pam Houston's wonderful stories, sex and hunting are somehow confused, as are humans and animals. People wear skins, the animals speak, and those guys--the ones we all thought were extinct, the ones who defined what a man was--turn up, very much alive, and up to their usual tricks. Houston's women know they should know better, but they don't, and the result is a beautiful collection about sexual politics, old and new.--Charles Baxter
Exhilarating, like a swift ride through river rapids.-- "Washington Post Book World"
Illuminated by a sturdy sense of humor and a gift for poetic description.-- "The New Yorker"
[Houston's] prose [is] sharp and clean and full of sentences worth underlining.-- "New York Times Book Review"
A powerhouse.... Houston's women are strong and free-spirited--their encounters with their moosehunting, whitewater-rafting, wilderness-loving lovers are more comic than tragic, and always entertaining.-- "St. Louis Post-Dispatch"
Houston is a writer of talent and promise.-- "Newsday"
A brilliant collection of stories... that strike at the heart and end up revealing much about the complex state of relations between men and women.--Judith Freeman "Los Angeles Times"
Many of these short gems owe their entire core to the west, which, more a character than a setting, allows subtle interplay to occur between Houston's strong, modern women and the prairie or rangeland they temporarily inhabit.-- "Milwaukee Journal"
Beautifully written and funny.-- "Cleveland Plain Dealer"
These are adventure stories that would make Hemingway jealous.-- "Arizona Republic"