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Sleeping Mask: Fictions

di Peter LaSalle

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
1881,191,321 (4.45)1
"LaSalle's [stories] transcend their particulars to show people with dreams, dilemmas, and disappointments that will move any reader." --Jhumpa Lahiri,Harvard Review "Haunting and evocative. . . . LaSalle's prose is lyrical, at times rhapsodic, and his characters memorable." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) The twelve stories ofSleeping Mask, written in propulsive, fluid prose, introduce readers to remarkable characters. They include a child soldier sent to raid a girls' boarding school, a Virginia Woolf scholar surviving cancer, a desperate writer living under fascism in a futuristic Latin America, the spirits of recently deceased college students on a tour of the Musée d'Orsay in Paris, and a middle-aged man transported back to his childhood, where he is led out to sea by his mother's ghost. LaSalle's tantalizing "fictions" are evocative of many of the great innovators of postmodern literature, from Borges to Nabokov, while charting a path entirely their own. Through all of their stylistic pyrotechnics these stories never forsake rich characterization and plotting to probe the deepest parts of the contemporary human condition, such as the nature of erotic desire, the legacy of art and artistry, the power of grief and fear, and the horror of war and violence. Peter LaSalle is the author of several books of fiction, including the story collectionsTell Borges If You See Him, recipient of he Flannery O'Connor Award, andWhat I Found Out About Her, winner of the Richard Sullivan Prize in Short Fiction. He lives in Austin, Texas, where he is a member of the creative writing faculty at the University of Texas, and Narragansett, in his native Rhode Island.… (altro)
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Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
An excellent collection of short stories. Some not as successful as others but the author has a powerful writing style and has something to say about life in this century. I thought "Boys:An African Fable" was an amazingly well written story that wrung one's heart and emotions. Totally recommend both the book and the writer. ( )
  Knittingstix | May 22, 2017 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
LaSalle's collection of stories was unusual in that it wasn't hit or miss. There weren't any misses, but there weren't any strong hits. Still, it does better than average since his skill is evident and the writing is skilled. I think I'd be interested in reading a longer work from LaSalle because the stories do have a slow build. A long-form work probably does better to showcase his talent. ( )
  Sean191 | Mar 6, 2017 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
A collection of short stories on very different lives and how they find peace at the end of each day, regardless of how chaotic their day to day lives are.
Everyone is looking for something to comfort them, to make them relax and and take a step back from their chaotic life and what might come next. Whether its a boy caught up in a gang of orphans who murder men and kidnap orphan girls, or a professor battling a horrible illness, they, like us, are all looking for comfort and solace at the end of each and every day. Some sign of normalcy and predictable to comfort and lull them to sleep before they start thinking about what might be thrown at them tomorrow. People who live their lives from one day to the next, not sure if they will see tomorrow, not sure if they want to see tomorrow. They put on this mask at the end of their day, a mask of familiarity and hope, something to make them forget about their woahs for just a few minutes.
The characters are lively and realistic, outlandish, but relatable. they are all unique and so completely different from one another, each of their stories are so different from one another, and yet, at the end of the day, they are all looking for the same things before they drop off into sleep. ( )
  jadorelecafe | Jan 18, 2017 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Time is a contemporary problem. Peter LaSalle suspends it in his short stories, called "fictions," collected in the "Sleeping Mask" (New York 2017) by the Bellevue Literary Press. What better place to suspend time, bringing the past forward and placing the present behind it, than in a dream behind a sleeping mask?

LaSalle's fictions may suspend time but not belief. The fictions are set in familiar places and the characters appear real, stark in their human conditions. Love that becomes sad when it brings together the young and old. Rebellion when boys war like men and girls make it moral, mortal and personal. Dreams of Edgar Allan Poe reading of his posthumous fame when he no doubt toiled in debt. Bud the painter, who had not followed a normal course to success, which spooked him and his drinking buddies to eternity.

The protagonists of some fictions have no reference bias – not in the story but of the story. An illness takes a liking to windows; drawing inspiration from Wallace Stevens' poetry. A jet flight with nothing to do but let its passengers transgress to its end. The hands of fascism, which strangle civil disobedience. Mirrors, which I agree with LaSalle – never to be taken for granted.

I often read the last entry of short story collections first and save the first for last. But I first took in LaSalle's fictions in serial order because the Bellevue press promises in each of its books a transformative read that resound in memory. LaSalle's fictions did not disappoint me. I will randomly take them up again. ( )
  LaRoque | Dec 31, 2016 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Sleeping Masks is an evocative collection of short stories that explore what it means to be human in contemporary times. The stories pull you out of time and into what feels like a dream state that leaves you pondering existence and society. Many of the stories are filled with raw emotion and are excellent at transporting the reader into the stories while maintaining a delightful sense of being apart. The essence of maintaining a distance while immersing one in the story is refreshing and it seems fitting. The more academic or pedantic stories seem to draw you into a topic that seems dry or uninteresting and leave you wanting more. The command of language and understanding of human nature across cultures, time, and geographic location are masterful. ( )
  lesserlady | Dec 14, 2016 |
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"LaSalle's [stories] transcend their particulars to show people with dreams, dilemmas, and disappointments that will move any reader." --Jhumpa Lahiri,Harvard Review "Haunting and evocative. . . . LaSalle's prose is lyrical, at times rhapsodic, and his characters memorable." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) The twelve stories ofSleeping Mask, written in propulsive, fluid prose, introduce readers to remarkable characters. They include a child soldier sent to raid a girls' boarding school, a Virginia Woolf scholar surviving cancer, a desperate writer living under fascism in a futuristic Latin America, the spirits of recently deceased college students on a tour of the Musée d'Orsay in Paris, and a middle-aged man transported back to his childhood, where he is led out to sea by his mother's ghost. LaSalle's tantalizing "fictions" are evocative of many of the great innovators of postmodern literature, from Borges to Nabokov, while charting a path entirely their own. Through all of their stylistic pyrotechnics these stories never forsake rich characterization and plotting to probe the deepest parts of the contemporary human condition, such as the nature of erotic desire, the legacy of art and artistry, the power of grief and fear, and the horror of war and violence. Peter LaSalle is the author of several books of fiction, including the story collectionsTell Borges If You See Him, recipient of he Flannery O'Connor Award, andWhat I Found Out About Her, winner of the Richard Sullivan Prize in Short Fiction. He lives in Austin, Texas, where he is a member of the creative writing faculty at the University of Texas, and Narragansett, in his native Rhode Island.

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