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Our Story Begins: New and Selected Stories (Unabridged)

Our Story Begins: New and Selected Stories (Unabridged)
Author: Tobias Wolff
Publisher: audible.com
Category: Book

List Price: $32.95
Buy New: $17.30
You Save: $15.65 (47%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 15 reviews

Media: Audio Download

ASIN: B0016NBV3A

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Our Story Begins: New and Selected Stories
  • Paperback - Our Story Begins: New and Selected Stories (Vintage Contemporaries)
  • Audio Cassette - Our Story Begins
  • Audio Cassette - Our Story Begins : New and Selected Stories
  • Audio CD - Our Story Begins : New and Selected Stories
  • CD-ROM - Our Story Begins : New and Selected Stories
  • Kindle Edition - Our Story Begins
  • Audio CD - Our Story Begins

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

“One of our most exquisite storytellers” (Esquire) gives us his first collection in over a decade: ten potent new stories that, along with twenty-one classics, display his mastery over a quarter century.

Tobias Wolff’s first two books, In the Garden of the North American Martyrs and Back in the World, were a powerful demonstration of how the short story can “provoke our amazed appreciation,” as The New York Times Book Review wrote then. In the years since, he’s written a third collection, The Night in Question, as well as a pair of genre-defining memoirs (This Boy’s Life and In Pharaoh’s Army), the novella The Barracks Thief, and, most recently, a novel, Old School.

Now he returns with fresh revelations—about biding one’s time, or experiencing first love, or burying one’s mother—that come to a variety of characters in circumstances at once everyday and extraordinary: a retired Marine enrolled in college while her son trains for Iraq, a lawyer taking a difficult deposition, an American in Rome indulging the Gypsy who’s picked his pocket. In these stories, as with his earlier, much-anthologized work, he once again proves himself, according to the Los Angeles Times, “a writer of the highest order: part storyteller, part philosopher, someone deeply engaged in asking hard questions that take a lifetime to resolve.”




Customer Reviews:   Read 10 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The Stories Continue   September 24, 2008
Tobias Wolff is the best storyteller of our time... Many classic stories are included here, so it's a great primer for newcomers. It also includes ten new stories, several of which rank among his best, others that are still great... Far outshines other books I've read this year... Wolff is a writer who never forgets that a story needs to have a story. So many modern collections meander and try to impress with lingual fireworks that fizzle; Wolff gives you a hearty meal to sink your teeth into.


5 out of 5 stars Tobias Wolff's Greatest Hits   September 16, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Perhaps in the tradition of Raymond Carver's decision to compile in 'peak-career' his 'greatest hits' compilation of short stories in Where Im Calling From, out comes Tobias Wolff with this fantastic book.

These stories are short-short (more in the length tradition of Barthelme than Carver), but you will be amazed on the clarity, load of the subject, conciseness, and impact. The tone and style can shift between stories as well--humurous to morose, declarative to imperative, relaxed to upfront, 'heavy' themes to moderate/light--perhaps testifying to how careful Wolff plans, writes, edit, and re-edit his stories before publishing. The craftiness or perhaps sheer natural talent of Tobias Wolff in working with shorts is astounding. He makes it look easy.

Read BULLET IN THE BRAIN first; you'll immediately be paid back of the book's total price.



5 out of 5 stars Amazing   September 3, 2008
This collection of short stories is nothing short of amazing. I've always cherished my collections of Hemingway and Raymond Carver short stories, but am adding this book as one of those that I can read again and again, each time seeing it fresh.


5 out of 5 stars Adjectives fail me.   July 17, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Each of these stories has the emotional weight of a literary punch in the gut. A punch in the gut that you'll enjoy, and remember. Many of the stories are from prior collections, but there are new stories as well - and the new ones contain just as much power as the older one. I was lucky enough to have this be my introduction to Mr. Wolff, and I am deeply grateful for the opportunity.


5 out of 5 stars Wolff Gold   July 17, 2008
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

Tobias Wolff's latest collection of short stories, written over a period of thirty years, contains twenty-one previously published in book form with ten new stories added. The characters and situations are diverse although a good many stories take place in the snow; as one character says, however-- and I tend to agree with him-- snow is much overrated. I also agree with the writer Edward P. Jones whose definition of a good short story is one that "the world, for even one character, has shifted, whether to a large or a tiny degree." These stories (at least practically all of them) would interest Mr. Jones. In some of them the shift is enormous: a bank customer is shot in the head by a robber; one hunter shoots a friend, a fellow hunter; a young man in an act of definace paints a white picket fence red; a professor, having learned that she has been duped into interviewing for a teaching position that the search committee has already decided on, veers from her canned lecture on the Marshall Plan into an extemporaneous speech about the barbarism of the Iroquois. In others the world moves inside the head of the character. In "Awaiting Orders" a sergeant realizes that he is ashamed to take a woman and her child home with him, not because he has a male lover, but because she will see that he doesn't care for the lover as much as the lover cares for him. "What he feared, what he could not allow, was for her to see how Dixon [his lover] looked at him, and then to see that he coud not give back what he received. That things between them were unequal, and himself unloving." A man at the death watch for his mother no longer knows how to be a son but can be a father.

Mr. Wolff writes about relationships, the "shakiness" of families, young love, betrayal, characters who are down and out although they seldom whine-- in a word often decent people. One of my favorite stories is "The Night in Question," a beautiful moving account of a brother and sister who had an abusive father. The siblings are worlds apart because the brother has gone off the deep end with religion but still so close because of their love for each other. It bears reading again and again.

Wolff's seamless transparent prose is for the most part free of metaphor although older people have "wintry smiles" and a "wide woman" on a bus has flesh under her arms that "swings like hammocks." These stories are not for the lazy reader for they are as subtle and complex as anything Henry James ever wrote although Mr. Wolff certainly is a master of the short story himself.


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