The characters in Jane McCafferty's Director of the World and Other Stories are often distanced, lonely, or displaced from others and the events around them, yet they are almost always ready to act, to become involved with others, and to change. In \u201cEyes of Others, \u201d a woman, stopping with her family at a Howard Johnson's during a trip, becomes fascinated by the meeting of two strangers and attempts to connect with them as she has been unable to connect with her own family. Implicit in these stories is a rootlessness that gives way to yearning and a passion for remembering. In the title story, a disturbed child, whose father has recently abandoned the family, attempts, in language reflecting her shattered sense of the world, to recapture some of their last experiences together. These characters, and others in the collection, attempt to make sense of their broken lives and shattered thoughts. As John Wideman writes of the stories, there is \u201ca sense of commitment to the struggle of making silent worlds speak, of forcing what is threatening or evil or destructive into some form we can see and conjure with.\u201d
I met Jane McCafferty a few months back, and she seemed like a real decent person, so I figured I'd give her writing a shot. I am so glad I did. In story after story, McCafferty beautifully captures the sadness and loss that haunts so many of us, and our attempts to wear a brave face, to keep the darkness at bay. She uses plainspoken language and populates her tales with recognizable characters, details, and emotions, with a car radio often supplying the soundtrack. I was totally impressed, and can't wait to read more of her work.
Transporting
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
I pulled this off my shelf to dig up a passage that I wanted to e-mail to a friend, and ended up rereading the whole thing. Within a page each story transports me to a place, floating unseen right next to the main character, not reading a story but witnessing a piece out of some people's lives. Some of my favorite stories here play variations on the theme of one of life's most dizzying universals: the times when someone who you thought was going to be walking beside you the rest of your life goes away, and even if you might eventually see them again it'll never be the same between you. Kids watch parents disappear into mental breakdown. A divorced mom packs her kids up for an impromptu road trip to try (for a little while)to outrun the fact that dad is off somewhere making a new life with somebody else. An alcoholic, estranged dad witnesses one night in the long friendship of two women as he digests the knowledge that his young daughter isn't ready to come see him just yet. Two inseparable adolescent girls' friendship vaporizes in an all-too-common way. McCafferty's compassion is palpable, her eye for detail unerring. And I'd be saying all this even if I'd never met and spent time with the author over a very happy summer nearly 20 years ago. Publication couldn't happen to a nicer person...
This book is great
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
This is one of the best books i have ever read. These collection of Ms. McCafferty's short stories is spectatcular.
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