Simon Van Booy
Language: English
ISBN mobi-asin
Publisher: HarperCollins e-books
Published: Jan 2, 2007
A breadth of experience and setting distinguishes this somber first collection of 18 very short stories by New York-based Van Booy. "Little Birds" is narrated by a teenage boy of uncertain parentage who sketches his life with his devoted foster father, Michel, in working-class Paris: "It is the afternoon of my birthday, but still the morning of my life. I am walking on the Pont des Arts." In "Some Bloom in Darkness," an aging railroad station clerk's witness of a violent scene between a man and woman translates in his mind into an infatuation with a store mannequin. Other tales are set in Rome ("I live in Rome where people sit by fountains and kiss"), small villages in Cornwall or Wales, and in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Los Angeles. Van Booy's characters are shipwrecked by fate and memory but tarry on, like the narrator of "Distant Ships," a lifelong Royal Mail loader who stopped speaking after the death of his son 20 years earlier, or the homeless man chased by ghosts in "The Shepherd on the Rock," who aims to "live out the last of my life" at John F. Kennedy International Airport. These tales have at once the solemnity of myth and the offhandedness of happenstance. (May) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
In the 18 very short stories included in Van Booy's first collection, the resilient characters often emerge from bleak circumstances with an unexpected and completely engaging optimism. In "Little Birds," the Parisian son of a dead prostitute has found unconditional love from his adoptive father, Michel, who spares the teenager the gruesome details surrounding his mother's violent death, telling him she was an "elegant Asian princess" and encouraging him in his plans to attend the Sorbonne. In "As Much Below as Up Above," a former Russian navy man spends the afternoon at a Brooklyn beach trying to work up the courage to enter the water. He's held back by the memory of a submarine accident that claimed the lives of his seven comrades. He wants to surf the waves so that the sea can carry his "unceasing love to their still bodies." Although some of Van Booy's stories are too slight, in the strongest ones he shows an uncanny ability to create intense moods and emotions within the space of a few poetic paragraphs. Joanne WilkinsonCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Description:
From Publishers Weekly
A breadth of experience and setting distinguishes this somber first collection of 18 very short stories by New York-based Van Booy. "Little Birds" is narrated by a teenage boy of uncertain parentage who sketches his life with his devoted foster father, Michel, in working-class Paris: "It is the afternoon of my birthday, but still the morning of my life. I am walking on the Pont des Arts." In "Some Bloom in Darkness," an aging railroad station clerk's witness of a violent scene between a man and woman translates in his mind into an infatuation with a store mannequin. Other tales are set in Rome ("I live in Rome where people sit by fountains and kiss"), small villages in Cornwall or Wales, and in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Los Angeles. Van Booy's characters are shipwrecked by fate and memory but tarry on, like the narrator of "Distant Ships," a lifelong Royal Mail loader who stopped speaking after the death of his son 20 years earlier, or the homeless man chased by ghosts in "The Shepherd on the Rock," who aims to "live out the last of my life" at John F. Kennedy International Airport. These tales have at once the solemnity of myth and the offhandedness of happenstance. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
In the 18 very short stories included in Van Booy's first collection, the resilient characters often emerge from bleak circumstances with an unexpected and completely engaging optimism. In "Little Birds," the Parisian son of a dead prostitute has found unconditional love from his adoptive father, Michel, who spares the teenager the gruesome details surrounding his mother's violent death, telling him she was an "elegant Asian princess" and encouraging him in his plans to attend the Sorbonne. In "As Much Below as Up Above," a former Russian navy man spends the afternoon at a Brooklyn beach trying to work up the courage to enter the water. He's held back by the memory of a submarine accident that claimed the lives of his seven comrades. He wants to surf the waves so that the sea can carry his "unceasing love to their still bodies." Although some of Van Booy's stories are too slight, in the strongest ones he shows an uncanny ability to create intense moods and emotions within the space of a few poetic paragraphs. Joanne Wilkinson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved