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In his first collection, author Donald Antrim explores the joy and emotional chaos of life as we live it. In elegant, concise prose, Antrim crafts funny, tender stories of men and women disorientated by love, loss and bouts of madness. In 'Another Manhattan' an unfaithful husband goes out to buy flowers for his wife, while, across town in 'Solace' a new couple, both survivors of difficult childhoods, find comfort together in other peoples' apartments. In 'Pond, With Mud' a struggling poet takes his girlfriend's son, Bunny, to the zoo. 'An Actor Prepares' takes place on the edge of a University campus, where a group of students are brought together by their ageing drama professor, whose predilection for pot and crush on his star pupil threaten to upset their performance of A Midsummer Night's Dream. In 'He Knew', Stephen takes his girlfriend on a walk through Manhattan and together they try to ward off their fears and sorrows. And in the title story, 'The Emerald Light in the Air', a bereaved art teacher drives into the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, intending to throw away his ex-girlfriend's paintings. Exquisitely composed and executed with great empathy, Antrim's richly detailed fictional worlds are a reflection of our own, as everyday and as wonderful.
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"A masterful story collection--heartbreaking and hilarious--from one of America's greatest writers. Nothing is simple for the men and women in Donald Antrim's stories. As they do the things we all do--bum a cigarette at a party, stroll with a girlfriend down Madison Avenue, take a kid to the zoo--they're confronted with their own uncooperative selves. These artists, writers, lawyers, teachers, and actors make fools of themselves, spiral out of control, have delusions of grandeur, despair, and find it hard to imagine a future. They talk, they listen, they hope, they dream. They look for communion in a city, both beautiful and menacing, which can promise so much and yield so little. But they are hungry for life. They want to love and be loved. These stories, all published in The New Yorker over the last fifteen years, make it clear that Antrim is one of America's most important writers. His work has been praised by his significant contemporaries, including Jonathan Franzen, Thomas Pynchon, Jeffrey Eugenides, and George Saunders, who described The Verificationist as "one of the most pleasure-giving, funny, perverse, complicated, addictive novels of the last twenty years." And here, at last, is the story collection we have been waiting for, The Emerald Light in the Air, Antrim's best book yet"--
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