The Balm of Gilead Tree: New and Selected Stories
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Product Description
Fiction. Robert Morgan has had four NEA Fellowships as well as Guggenheim and Rockefeller Foundation fellowships. Ten powerful new stories are collected here for the first time and seven are reprinted from his two acclaimed earlier collections.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1959187 in Books
- Published on: 1999-10
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 344 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Novelist (The Truest Pleasure), poet and short story writer Morgan displays an impressive command of American history and of language in this collection of new and selected stories. Arranged chronologically, from the 16th century to the present, each tale embraces a strong, authentic voice; Morgan's narrative range is remarkable. The entire collection is set in Morgan's native regionAthe mountains of North CarolinaAand the stories mainly focus on the poor or otherwise disenfranchised. A poverty-stricken white family takes in and grows to love the sick child of escaped slaves in "Little Willie," only to watch him die in an accident. Willie's foster mother, Celia, is devastated: "...it kept coming to my mind human life didn't mean a thing." The characters are often the victims of tragedy, but they are never maudlin, and they find joy in unexpected places. In "The Bullnoser," the unnamed, unemployed narrator stumbles into a career in blackmail when he discovers that a local landowner is illegally dumping toxic chemicals. "The cold beer tasted both like hope and confidence," he thinks to himself. Some of Morgan's most effective characters are war veterans. A young man returning from WWII in "The Welcome" finds himself alienated from his family and friends; in "Tailgunner," an older man looks back on his experiences in a German prison camp, but no one is interested in his reminiscences. "The Ratchet" is a nail-biter: two brothers driving a log truck on the downslope of a heavily trafficked mountain road realize they have no brakes. All of Morgan's characters are careening somewhere; reading their stories, you wish them the best, but anticipate the worst. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Publishers Weekly
"...each tale embraces a strong, authentic voice; Morgan's narrative range in remarkable."
New York Times Book Review
What's remarkable about"The Balm of Gilead Tree" is not just the sweep and scope of Morgan's stories, but his ability to write about individuals in a wide variety of circumstances.
