From the highly acclaimed author of Edisto and The Interrogative Mood, Padgett Powell’s new collection of stories,Cries for Help, Various, follows his mentor Donald
Barthelme’s advice that wacky mode” must break their hearts.” The surrealistic and comical terrain of most of the forty-four stories here is grounded by a real preoccupation with longing,
fear, work, loneliness, and cultural nostalgia. In Joplin and Dickens,” the musician and writer meet as emotionally needy students in an American middle school; in Change of Life,” a father
ponders whether getting new clothes for the family or the patriotic purchase of a new Government Cookie Flyer” would be more meaningful. In The Imperative Mood,” giving orders to othersFall
back and regroup”leads less to power than to rumination.
Padgett Powell’s language is both lofty and low-down, his tone cranky and heartfelt, exuberant and inconsolable. His characters rebel against convention and ambition, hoping to maintain their very sanity by doing so. Even the most hilarious or fantastical stories in Cries for Help, Various ring gloriously, poignantly, true.
Padgett Powell’s language is both lofty and low-down, his tone cranky and heartfelt, exuberant and inconsolable. His characters rebel against convention and ambition, hoping to maintain their very sanity by doing so. Even the most hilarious or fantastical stories in Cries for Help, Various ring gloriously, poignantly, true.