Inappropriate Behavior bookcover

Inappropriate Behavior

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Description

Short fiction about people on the edge that "masterfully balances the absurd, the horrific, and the humorous" (Booklist).

The characters in Inappropriate Behavior teeter on the brink of sanity, while those around them reach out in support, watch helplessly, or duck for cover. In their loneliness, they cast about for a way to connect, to be understood, though more often than not, things go horribly wrong. Some of the characters come from the darkest recesses of American history. In 'Lubbock Is Not a Place of the Spirit, ' a Texas Tech student recognizable as John Hinckley, Jr. writes hundreds of songs for Jodie Foster as he grows increasingly estranged from reality. Other characters are recognizable only in the sense that their situations strike an emotional chord. The young couple in 'The Thing About Norfolk, ' socially isolated after a cross-country move, are dismayed to find themselves unable to resist sexually deviant urges. And in the deeply touching title story, a couple stretched to their limit after the husband's layoff struggle to care for their emotionally unbalanced young son. Set in cities across America and spanning the last half-century, this collection draws a bead on our national identity, distilling our obsessions, our hauntings, our universal predicament.

"Gripping and accomplished . . . These stories will be compared with works by Barry Hannah and Denis Johnson." --Janet Peery, National Book Award finalist and author of The Exact Nature of Our Wrongs

Product Details

PublisherMilkweed Editions
Publish DateMarch 11, 2014
Pages224
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781571311078
Dimensions8.7 X 5.5 X 0.7 inches | 0.6 pounds

About the Author

Murray Farish's short stories have appeared in The Missouri Review, Epoch, Roanoke Review, and Black Warrior Review, among other publications. His work has been awarded the William Peden Prize, the Phoebe Fiction Prize, and the Donald Barthelme Memorial Fellowship Prize, among others. Farish lives with his wife and two sons in St. Louis, Missouri, where he teaches writing and literature at Webster University. Inappropriate Behavior is his debut.

Reviews

Advance Praise for Inappropriate Behavior

The characters in these gripping and accomplished stories are rough customers--bad company, some of them--hellbent toward outer darkness. With fierce intensity and no slight streak of prophecy, Farish charts the paths they follow through a world gone haywire. These stories will be compared with works by Barry Hannah and Denis Johnson.
--Janet Peery, author of The River Beyond the World and What the Thunder Said

Inappropriate Behavior is a collection of lovely surprises: the tartly fresh, felicitous phrase, followed by the astonishing plot turn, and then by the lightning-streaked illumination of character. I think you will like this book.
--Ken Kalfus, author of Equilateral

A few facts about Murray Farish. First, he is wise, wickedly so, about the betimes corrupted creatures we are and about the hopes that bedevil us, not to mention the whichaway we go through time and the lies we need to tell ourselves when the bogey-men leap out from the shadows. Second, he's a deft and careful a craftsman between margins as you'll find at the keyboard nowadays, his stories models of clarity and design and artistic felicity. Finally, he, as the writer, does all the work so that we, his readers, experience all the pleasure, no matter how crosswise or inappropriate the behaviors found between 'once upon a time' and 'the end.' Do yourself a favor: put some Farish fiction between your ears.
--Lee K. Abbott, author of All Things, All at Once

Farish writes with a fiercely humanistic and moral rigor: we suffer together; we live together. We want, each of us, to be happy. There are scenes here that will still your heart with the quiet beauty of their soul-wisdom. The heartbreaking and beautifully constructed title story is the most authentic treatment of the Great Recession that I have read yet. Meticulous, richly detailed, and openly generous to the lives of the emotionally and socially displaced--these stories are the gift of a serious and electric talent.
--T. M. McNally, author of Low Flying Aircraft, winner of the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction, and The Goat Bridge

Murray Farish is up to something risky in Inappropriate Behavior. Set in the marginal cities and simmering towns of the south and midwest, the fictions anchor themselves in startling images: a man crawling across a corporate parking lot, a married couple raptly watching a teenage girl's window, a diner waitress walking away from a car wreck. In a voice that is by turns funny, incisive, and lyrical, Farish plumbs the peculiar darknesses of American history and private life--these stories are nocturnal expeditions that leave an afterglow.
--Eric Lundgren, author of The Facades

Interesting and accomplished, this collection of stories explores the intersection of abhorrent behavior and the facade of ordinary life. Murray has mastered the short story and this collection is solid--not a weak one in the bunch.
--Sarah Bagby, Watermark Books & Cafe, Wichita, Kansas

What is your inappropriate behavior of choice? Debut author Murray Farish, in this hip collection of stories, exposes an America living on the edge--the edge of the law, the edge of grief, the edge of society. Portraying characters who appear as real as a next-door neighbor, each unique story will make you wonder just what is happening behind closed doors. Highly original and focused on the unusual, Inappropriate Behavior is an auspicious beginning for the talented new voice of Murray Farish.
--Nancy Simpson-Brice, Book Vault, Oskaloosa, Iowa

As the title suggests, this collection of short stories deals with what our society considers inappropriate behavior, whether it be obsessive, cruel or violent. The stories, with characters ranging from irate co-workers to crazy college students with guns, are all the more disturbing and powerful as they describe situations that are far from the ordinary. Farrish delivers a superb observation of contemporary America where the border between sanity and insanity is tenuous and blurry at best.
--Pierre Camy, Schuler Books, Grand Rapids, MI

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