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Sweet Land Stories
 
 

Sweet Land Stories (Hardcover)

de E.L. Doctorow (Author) "MAMA SAID I WAS THENCEFORTH TO BE HER NEPHEW, and to call her Aunt Dora ..." En savoir plus
4.0étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (4 évaluations de client)

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From Publishers Weekly

As one might expect of Doctorow, the title is ironic. In settings that range across the U.S., most of the alienated characters in the five stories here find life anything but sweet as they struggle to surmount the stigmas of poverty, lack of education and their instincts to gamble against the odds. Three of the male protagonists are passive and amoral; attempting to defend their irrational behavior, each reminds himself that he is not stupid. All of themâ€"a young grifter who dutifully abets his mother's murderous greed on a farm near Chicago ("A House on the Plains"); a love-besotted accessory to a kidnapping in California (the slyly humorous "Baby Wilson"); and a cuckolded member of a religious cult commune in Kansas ("Walter John Harmon")â€"share a capacity for self-delusion and self-preservation. The two female protagonists attempt to alter fate and find themselves buffeted by the inescapable force of male power. The protagonist of "Jolene: A Life" is forced into a cross-country hegira in pursuit of a sweet land where she won't be an outsider. Scared and desperate despite her cool facade, Jolene becomes a victim in every relationship. If the story's denouement veers too close to soap opera, Doctorow's empathetic character portrayal redeems the plot twists. The most riveting narrative, "Child, Dead, in the Rose Garden," describes a presidential administration that is secretive, arrogant and contemptuous of ordinary citizens. In this knowing treatment of the cynical abuse of power, Doctorow uses the spare, laconic style endemic to thrillers and builds suspense with sure strokes. Boring like a laser into the failures of the American dream, he captures the resilience of those who won't accept defeat.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


From Booklist

*Starred Review* Doctorow is at once a supremely entertaining storyteller and a profound writer of conscience, and he forges an extraordinarily potent blend of artistry, compassion, and covert outrage in his new short story collection, the first since the indelible Lives of the Poets (1984). Here are five perfectly honed and sharp-edged stories about faith, love, and the abuse of power. Five ambushing and hair-raising tales featuring intensely compelling characters and impossible situations that unveil key paradoxes intrinsic to American society. Set in the horse-and-buggy era, "A House on the Plains" charts the adventures of an enterprising woman and her grown son, who reluctantly leaves Chicago to accompany her on what turns out to be a diabolical mission in a small Illinois town. The criminal mind fascinates Doctorow, as does the law and its failings, and men's cruelty toward women, tragic realities he sure-handedly explores to powerful effect in "Jolene: A Life," a classic hard-luck, white-trash tale with universal implications. Doctorow boldly takes on the enigma of religious cults in the eerie "Walter John Harmon," and in the scorching story, "Child, Dead, in the Rose Garden," he shrewdly and devastatingly uncloaks the workings of an utterly corrupt White House, and the drastic consequences of such a colossal betrayal. At base, what Doctorow's unique and electrifying stories grapple with is our longing to trust authority and our realization that, instead, we must always question it. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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4.0étoiles sur 5 Doctorow is at his best in this collection of short stories, Juil 5 2004
Par Bookreporter.com (New York, New York) - Voir tous mes commentaires
The name E.L. Doctorow evokes the expression "the great American novel." His books --- BILLY BATHGATE, RAGTIME, THE WATERWORKS and CITY OF GOD, to name a few --- exemplify the recurring themes and enduring ethos of America's landscape and peoples. And SWEET LAND STORIES, Doctorow's latest collection of short stories, continues his literary tradition of writing about uniquely American folk.

In "A House on the Plains," Aunt Dora is a scam artist who packs up her family, leaves (escapes, really) Chicago, and moves to the country. Once there, the scheming and scamming begin anew, displaying Doctorow's fascination with and uncanny understanding of the darker, seedier side of human nature.

This theme persists in "Baby Wilson," but is tinged with a compassion that has become the hallmark of many of Doctorow's questionable characters. Karen, who is not right of mind, kidnaps a baby; the deed is malicious, but the desire for a child is not. In fact, it's innocent and pure. One can't help but feel sympathy for both her and her beau, who makes every effort to protect her and do the right thing by her.

"Jolene: A Life" is a study of a life spiraling downward, and at the center is a young lady who appears incapable of regaining some semblance of control, by no fault of her own. Her tale is heroically tragic.

Doctorow gives us an odd slice of life in "Walter John Harmon" --- cult, commune life, that is. Harmon, a former mechanic in a small Kansas town, preaches the goal of Seventh Attainment. In what won't be a surprising plot event, Harmon absconds with the community's wealth; but what might surprise you is the community's unwavering and blind devotion to what he preached, even after he's gone.

And finally, "Child, Dead, In the Rose Garden" is a powerful mystery packed into a slim few pages. A body, a detective, a deception.

Doctorow is at his best in SWEET LAND STORIES, tales about people in all their raw humanity.(...).

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5.0étoiles sur 5 Great fast summer read, Juil 4 2004
Par Un client
I loved it!!! This was a very provocative and entertaining group of stories which held my attention. It did just what it was designed to do.... Get the reader to think but not too much.....Great fast read
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2.0étoiles sur 5 All Surface and No Depth, Mai 23 2004
One of my favorite books is E.L. Doctorow's RAGTIME, so I really expected to love SWEET LAND STORIES. Instead of loving them, I was extremely disappointed.

While the stories in SWEET LAND STORIES are well written, they're all trite and clichéd. They're mildly entertaining, but not one of them offers us a fresh insight or original look at the world and the characterization is both stock and paper-thin. There's not one character, male or female, who's is truly believable.

The plots are just as thin as the characters. They are so sketchy, they read more like outlines than actual stories and they're all cliché. Every one of these stories represents material we've seen done before and done quite a bit better as well.

Another thing I found disappointing about SWEET LAND STORIES was the fact that they are almost entirely narrative. Doctorow certainly has the ability to create convincing characters and dialogue, to give us stories with complex themes and a fresh look at old problems. As I read the stories in SWEET LAND STORIES, I had to ask myself over and over: What happened?

The stories contained in SWEET LAND STORIES are quintessential American stories and the characters are quintessential Americans, but in a bad way. Doctorow seems intent on hitting the reader over the head again and again with the fact that America is a "sweet land" and that his very flawed characters have the ability, in America, at least, of moving on, of transforming themselves, of reinventing their lives. I might have believed it had the characters and the stories had any depth, but as it is, they're so shallow I simply couldn't buy their ability to do much at all.

Sadly, the stories in SWEET LAND STORIES are all surface and no depth. SWEET LAND STORIES is an extremely disappointing collection from one of America's premier authors. Recommended only for those who want to keep up on everything Doctorow writes.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 Short stories that are a cut above the rest.
I first became acquainted with the marvelous short stories of E.L. Doctorow while reading the 2002 Best American Short Stories anthology; in fact, the first story, "The House... Read more
Publié le Mai 23 2004 par S. Calhoun

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