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Few Short Notes Tropical Butterflies
 
 

Few Short Notes Tropical Butterflies (Paperback)

by John Murray (Author) "On the first morning of the training in Bombay, just minutes before she collapsed, Elizabeth Dinakar stood in front of two hundred people in the..." (more)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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From Amazon.com

John Murray trained as a doctor, and his debut collection of stories, A Few Short Notes on Tropical Butterflies, reveals its author's background. Not all of his characters are physicians, but they tend to share a doctor's ability to concentrate on details and compartmentalize emotions. In "The Hill Station," the American-born daughter of Indian parents returns to India, where she speaks at a conference on infectious diseases. She is charged with new, ungovernable feelings when she finally meets actual patients with the disease she specializes in; heretofore, she had only known cholera under a microscope. Murray bumps his heroine into a new, looser way of living as she travels deeper into dirty, disease-ridden India. In the title story, a doctor mourns the loss of his sister and comes to terms with his family history, all the while examining butterflies. In "Blue," a climber ascends a Himalayan peak under dire circumstances and encounters ghostly memories of his father. These stories of frustrated, intelligent achievers can recall Mark Helprin, and Murray has, too, some of Helprin's ambitious scope. These stories aren't as crystalline as Helprin's, but that's a small complaint to lodge about an elegant first collection. --Claire Dederer --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Publishers Weekly

The characters in this vibrant debut story collection-doctors, scientists and others drawn to precise order and logic-go to political and geographical extremes in search of a sense of purpose. A young American trauma surgeon in "Watson and the Shark" works for the Red Cross in a central African country. His craving for "life-or-death, all-or-nothing situations" is cruelly satisfied when he's shot by an armed rebel and his colleagues are forced to barter for their lives and abandon the people they went to the jungle to help. "The Hill Station" depicts a scientist in her immigrant parents' native Bombay seeking out the "real life" manifestation of the cholera bacteria she has spent her career studying in cool Atlanta laboratories. Overwhelmed by the horrors of the disease and the realization that an affair with a married colleague back home has left her pregnant, she flees the city and, on a bus headed to the tourist outpost of Mahabaleshwar, meets the man who will be a father to her unborn child. "The Carpenter Who Looked like a Boxer" is a beautifully restrained, vivid story about a gifted artisan trying to piece his life back together around the "great open wound" left by his wife's departure. Unlike many of Murray's characters, he doesn't try to run from his problems, but loses himself in his work and his two children instead. The only sign of strain is the strange, phantom burrowing sound that he hears in the walls of his house, a house he built for his wife. Murray's prose is strong and agile, rising to the drama of his scenarios without being overblown. His symbolism is occasionally too obvious, but this is a minor flaw; the affecting portraits make this collection emotionally resonant and enormously gratifying.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
On the first morning of the training in Bombay, just minutes before she collapsed, Elizabeth Dinakar stood in front of two hundred people in the conference hall, pointed up at the cholera bacteria magnified on the wall in front of her, and said "This is your enemy." Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars A gorgeous first work of fiction!, Feb 10 2004
By "rdwos" (Lansing, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
It might be possible to read through this book quickly, just as it might be possible to chug down a bottle of vintage wine, but I wouldn't recommend it. Murray's stories - full of subtleties and set on several continents - deserve to be savored. In particular, I loved "The Carpenter Who Looked Like A Boxer," the story of a man who has built a life for himself and his children after being abandoned by his wife. Most impressive is that, while most of the stories deal with themes of loss, abandonment and difficult decisions about life, their impact is one of beauty and hope - and I hope we'll see more from this writer!
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3.0 out of 5 stars Butterflies, Sep 5 2003
By Megami (Darwin, Australia) - See all my reviews
Yet again, i seem to disagree with the majority of Amazon reviewers...it's not deliberate i hasten to add!

This is a collection of short stories that don't seem to be linked by a common thread - all the stories bar one feature fathers, many feature doctors and/or medical dramas (Murray trained in medicine), many feature India or Indian ex-patriates - but there is no one common theme. It could be that these stories are all Murray has written, but if not you have to ask yourself if the editor really thought things through. By halfway through, you start each story wondering if yet again Murray will be using the same themes....the story that is a bit different 'Blue' with its austere setting, is all the more striking for not featuring the tropics. By the end, you feel that the writer is being arrogant, and rather than writing for a reader, he is simply working out his 'issues' story after story to the detriment of enjoying his work.

Except for the last story, these don't seem to work very well as short stories, rather they feel like chapters from novels; or perhaps ideas for novels that didn't quite grow.

While there is some lovely prose, there is not nearly enough to cover its flaws. The characters are interesting as isolated examples, but they become very boring when then seem to be in each story, just in a different guise - son/daughter dealing with clever and methodical father/grandfather while mother tries to grow as an individual.

It will be interesting to see if Murray writes a novel, and if so if he moves on to exploring new themes. Until then,

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5.0 out of 5 stars A Passion to Write Well, Jul 9 2003
By Evelyn N. Bramhall (Newark, De USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I've met so many doctors over the years who have incredible talent in other areas. Some manage to balance a full career and still pursue their painting or their love of the cello until they retire to live amazingly long lives, fueled by their passion on which they can now totally focus.
I don't know what Dr. Murray's agenda will be, but I hope he can manage the balance between writing and a medical career. Murray understands the human heart. He has a great understanding of that one large or small situation or life event that hurls a person into choices they might never have made.
Add to this his knowledge of the exotic world and its suffering about which most of us are totally in the dark, his facinating data, probably collected over a lifetime, regarding entymology, and finally his amazing ability with language, and you've got a tremendous reading experience.
I envy anyone who has yet to read this debut of short stories. I grabbed it from the library after reading two Sunday newspaper reviews. I was so struck by his writing that I immediately sought out a signed edition. I can open it to any page and start reading prose that is closer to poetry.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Exquisite and very spare
I didn't quite know what to expect when I rec'd this book as a gift - and therefore I was delighted to discover how very much I loved this debut story collection. Read more
Published on Jun 26 2003 by Peggy Vincent

4.0 out of 5 stars Thematically Focused and Written in a Lean Style
From the first sentence, these stories have a simple, direct tone that is reminiscent of Hemingway. "On the first morning of the training in Bombay, just minutes before she... Read more
Published on Jun 6 2003 by FictionAddiction.NET

2.0 out of 5 stars competent faceless
can you say VERY ORDINARY? it's just very anonymous material.
Published on Jun 1 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars Delightful Reading
Dear John Murray; Thank you for a wonderful experience. I enjoyed your book and beyond...the spiritual depth of characters and the very humaness of each, made me feel as if I knew... Read more
Published on May 25 2003 by Ellie

4.0 out of 5 stars A Remarkable Collection of Short Stories
This remarkable collection of short stories is written by a medical doctor-turned-author. Murray offers dazzling insight into the minds and hearts of men and women whom we may... Read more
Published on May 3 2003 by Bookreporter.com

5.0 out of 5 stars More than the sum of its parts
John Murray is an Australian physician with a distinguished career in public health. He has traveled widely and worked in extraordinary, challenging situations that provide him... Read more
Published on April 17 2003 by penny altman

4.0 out of 5 stars Frightening depths balanced by heights of beauty
John Murray, the author of this debut collection of eight short stories, trained as a doctor and is a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop, where he was a teaching-writing... Read more
Published on April 13 2003 by Roy E. Perry

5.0 out of 5 stars I had butterflies in my stomach!
Wow, my gut wretched at the stench of the medical tent in the slums of India. I could feel the warm, moist South Florida air early in the morning. Read more
Published on Mar 8 2003 by Wags

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