Listening for Ghosts: A Novella and Four Stories

(Author)
Available

Product Details

Price
$28.00  $26.04
Publisher
Delphinium Books
Publish Date
Pages
288
Dimensions
5.91 X 8.58 X 1.1 inches | 0.8 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781953002181

Earn by promoting books

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

Become an affiliate

About the Author

DAVD RABE has been hailed as one of America's greatest living playwrights. He is the author of many widely performed plays, including The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel, Sticks and Bones, In the Boom Boom Room, Streamers, Hurlyburly, and The Dog Problem. Four of his plays have been nominated for the Tony Award, including one win for Best Play. He is the recipient of an Obie Award, the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award, Drama Desk Award, and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award, among others. His numerous screenwriting credits include I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can, Casualties of War, Hurlyburly, and The Firm.

Rabe is the critically acclaimed author of the novels Dinosaurs on the Roof and Recital of the Dog, and a collection of short stories, A Primitive Heart. Born in Dubuque, Iowa, Rabe lives with his family in Northwest Connecticut.

Reviews

Skillful... Rabe's keen ear for how people talk, think, and behave makes these stories resonate. -- Publishers Weekly

Praise for Dinosaurs on the Roof: "David Rabe is... one of America's most celebrated contemporary playwrights. Darkly comic, painstakingly observed, Dinosaurs on the Roof raises all the right questions about life, sex, death, faith, and survival in an increasingly unforgiving world." -- Pam Houston, Oprah Magazine

"Dinosaurs on the Roof shifts with great dexterity from comedy to pathos, from despair to poignant recollection; it is imbued with an off-kilter lunacy.... But Mr. Rabe's point is not to ridicule the hayseeds, at least not any more than he'd ridicule anyone else for being human. On the contrary, kindness and warmth suffuse the way he regards and inhabits his characters. Their fears, their failings, their myriad bodily weaknesses--hunger, thirst, lust, addiction, incontinence, fatigue--earn his compassion." -- Laura Collins-Hughes, New York Observer

Praise for Girl by the Road at Night: "Rabe's portrait is multi-dimensional and engaging... he reveals himself to be as gifted a novelist as he is a playwright.... Above all, [Girl by the Road at Night is] a modern tragedy in which the war... becomes a metaphor for cruelty and injustice, for fate itself... a masterpiece of compression." -- Philip Caputo, New York Times Book Review

"This is a sharp-edged boy-meets-girl story complete with longings of the heart but stripped, as Rabe's plays are, of the conventional war-story veneer." -- Laura Collins-Hughes, Los Angeles Times

"From the gripping immediacy of Rabe's imagery, it's clear that the nightmare of Vietnam remains fresh with him... the story is told hauntingly..." -- Boston Globe

"Returning to the subject matter of his 1970s Vietnam War plays, Rabe presents, in some ways, a simple story encompassing a small number of scenes and elements, yet it's rich with underlying ironies and complexities." -- Library Journal

"Rabe never romanticizes his characters. This is no Romeo-and-Juliet story of unrequited love and desire. Instead, Whitaker and Lan play out their roles in both tender and brutal ways. A powerful statement about sex, war and identity." -- Kirkus Reviews