A debut collection of short fiction by an author whose work has appeared in Best American Short Stories and other collections and periodicals features such works as Thief, Dog Lover, Sadness of the Body, and the title story, about a man who transports organs for transplants.
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Jason Brown grew up in Maine, received his M.F.A. from Cornell University, and was a Stegner Fellow and Capote Fellow at Stanford University, where he now teaches. Jason Brown has won numerous fiction prizes and has been published in Best American Short Stories, 25 and Under/Fiction, Mississippi Review, Georgia Review, Story, Epoch, TriQuarterly, Indiana Review, and DoubleTake.
A debut collection of 13 stories, most of them portraying the unhappy domestic life of contemporary Americans. Brown seems to have set out to reverse Tolstoys famous dictum by offering us a group of unhappy families that appear remarkably similar, at least from the outside. Mad or terminally ill mothers predominate, as do drug-addicted children going through detox, and Vietnam vets who never quite pulled themselves together. Thief is a young mans recollections of his adolescence, during which he responded to the trauma of a mothers mental illness through kleptomaniaeven going so far as to steal presents in order to impress girls. Animal Stories is also a sons account, this one being the reminiscence of his mothers death of a brain tumor in the summer of 1972. In Dog Lover, a heroin addict and his blind Vietnam vet fatherboth haunted by the death of the mother and wife who killed herself years agoargue religion and live unhappily together amid a litter of puppies being raised by the son. Detox portrays life inside a county detoxification center where one of the inmates plots an escape. The Coroners Report describes the daily routines of a county coroner as he trains a new employee in the art of informing survivors of the deaths of their loved ones, while the title piece relates the experiences of an ambulance driver who delivers human organs to hospitals in time (he hopes) for successful transplant operations. The Sadness of the Body proceeds in a somewhat more postmodern vein, examining in mock-medical terminology (The spleen suffers from terminally low self- esteem. It refuses to talk to the rest of the body) the physiology of an alcoholic Vietnam vet who, back in 1968, was in charge of the body count. New wine that needs aging: overwritten, ponderous, and crammed with the sorts of platitudes (It seems that what we know makes us sad and what we dont know is who we are) that only undergraduates could find profound. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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