The Point
And Other Stories
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Word Count
64,000 words, Guess
Page Count
256 pages
Physical Format
Paperback
Identifiers
- ISBN-100316171255
- ISBN-139780316171250
- LibraryThing933390
- Library of Congress Control Number94025170
- OCLC Control Number37270209
and 2 more
- Better World Books9780316171250
- Open LibraryOL9436818M
Classifications
- LCCPS3554.A469 P65 1995
- DDC813/.54
Description
From the winner of the 1993 Aga Khan Prize for Fiction comes a literary debut that marks the arrival of a striking new voice in American fiction. Charles D'Ambrosio's work is full of light and humor even in its darkest visions: these are stories of sorrow and mercy, of people struggling to wrest meaning from the tragedies that hover over their lives. All have reached a point from which there can be no true return, and it is in this moment of destruction and renewal - with the world they've known collapsing eerily behind them - that D'Ambrosio's characters begin their perilous crossing from knowledge into forgiveness. The wise-beyond-his-years narrator of the title story guides a drunk woman home along the beach and confronts the violent legacy of his father's suicide. In "Her Real Name," a young man navigates the tired and forgotten allegory of the American West and manages a moment of ceremonial dignity as he buries a young girl at sea. In "Jacinta," a woman mourns her baby girl, who drowned in a tub of water left behind by evening rain. "American Bullfrog" and "Open House" are unforgettable stories of self-discovery and loss, detailing with simplicity and grace the loneliness of looking for a home in the world, or of pretending that you've found one. D'Ambrosio's fictions are packed with incident and bold in narrative sweep; in richly textured and often magnificent prose, they reveal a landscape of suffering and surprising beauty, of grief and restless hope. With the publication of The Point, Charles D'Ambrosio takes his place among the most interesting and exciting writers at work today.
First Sentence
I HAD BEEN lying awake after my nightmare, a nightmare in which Father and I bought helium ballons at a circus.
Excerpt
I HAD BEEN lying awake after my nightmare, a nightmare in which Father and I bought helium ballons at a circus.
Subjects
Other Editions
- The Point
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