American Histories: Stories

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Product Details
Price
$26.00  $24.18
Publisher
Scribner Book Company
Publish Date
Pages
240
Dimensions
5.8 X 8.6 X 0.9 inches | 0.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781501178344

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About the Author
John Edgar Wideman's books include, among others, Look for Me and I'll Be Gone, You Made Me Love You, American Histories, Writing to Save a Life, Brothers and Keepers, Philadelphia Fire, Fatheralong, Hoop Roots, and Sent for You Yesterday. He won the PEN/Faulkner Award twice and has twice been a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and National Book Award. He is a MacArthur Fellow and a recipient of the Lannan Literary Award for Lifetime Achievement, and the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in the Short Story. He divides his time between New York and France.
Reviews
"Wideman . . . boldly subverts what a short story can be in this wonderful collection. . . . Each story feels new, challenging, and exhilarating, beguilingly combining American history with personal history."
--Publishers Weekly, starred review
"With the scrupulous intelligence and meditative intensity that define all this author's work . . . . Mr. Wideman's explicit subject is racial injustice but his treatment of it quietly deepens into existential horror. . . . This, then, is not a book for the unwary. Mr. Wideman possesses a true and terrible vision of the tragic."
--Wall Street Journal
"John Edgar Wideman has established himself as one of the country's most formally inventive writers ... an important addition to Mr. Wideman's body of writing and a remarkable demonstration of his ability to address social issues through a range of fictional forms and styles."
--Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"Linked by astringent wit, audacious invention, and a dry sensibility whose owner has for decades wrestled with what he describes as "the puzzle of how and why and where and who we come from." Wideman's recent work strides into the gap between fiction and nonfiction as a means of disclosing hard, painful, and necessary truths.
--Kirkus, starred review
"Wideman's shape-shifting, lyrical narratives offer mesmerizing and challenging perspectives on the creative process and the black experience, decisively affirming his stature as a major voice in American literature."
--Booklist, starred review
"Wideman's 50-year writing career has won him countless awards, and the author proves his continued vitality, reimagining historical figures with vigor and soul."
--Entertainment Weekly
"Race and its reverberations are at the core of this slim, powerful volume, a blend of fiction, memoir, and reimagined history, in which the boundaries between those forms are murky and ever shifting."
--Boston Globe
"John Edgar Wideman's latest book feels like a coda to his impressive body of work. He deftly incorporates a range of black names from the 20th century -- Emmett Till, Jean-Michel Basquiat -- in his riffs, then plunges deeper into history."
--Seattle Times
"Wideman is a writer who excels at dramatising African American sensibilities and this collection typically addresses issues of race, injustice and inequality with power and potency. Crystallised moments of experience carry entire worlds in stories such as Maps and Ledgers, in which a black school teacher is told that his father has committed murdered a man, and Dark Matter, which recounts conversations diners have eating out, from the whimsical to the political ... A gem for anyone yet to discover his work."
--The Guardian
"Profound ... All of Wideman's work is distinguished by his elegant, sometimes almost stately prose that has rightly seen him at the forefront of American letters. But the structure of his work plays like jazz, layered and interwoven, never content with a single voice, understanding that perspective is various, varied."
--New Statesmen
"Singular."
--Brooklyn Rail
"A powerful assemblage of short stories exploring late-in-life angst through personal myth, cultural memory, and riffs on an empire scorched by its own hubris ... His prose, its twisting suntax, is a kind of stylish jazz of his own making."
--O Magazine

"A master stylist, Wideman pursues a wide array of tonal registers, rhetorical strategies, and musical effects in this collection of stories. He makes personal interventions in history and witnesses history intruding on the personal. Each story enacts a dialectic on matters of race that's mirrored in Wideman's sentences, the staccato tussling with the sinuous."
--Vulture, Best of 2018