|
|
Blood and SoapStories |
Product Details
ISBN-10
1-58322-642-7
ISBN-13
978-1-58322-642-1
Publication Date
May 2004
Nb of pages
160
|
DescriptionRead the Bookslut review Blood and Soap is a breakthrough collection of modern-day fables from a wildly inventive American writer whose fiction has been called "terse and edgy" (Booklist) and "vividly imagined" (Kirkus Reviews). Dinh's gift is for constructing, in the manner of Italo Calvino, simple narratives that quickly frame larger questions; with a poet's timing, the author builds his stories to the one or few climactic sentences that brand them with unforgettable meaning. In one tale, a Vietnamese boy's self-guided, haphazard study of English gives way to a meditation on the universality of language: "Everything seems chaotic at first, but nothing is chaotic. One can read anything: ants crawling on the ground; pimples on a face; trees in a forest." In another story, a man opens a newspaper and sees the photograph of a man he may have murdered, which he impulsively clips, only to feel that in doing so he unwittingly has sealed his crime: "As soon as I finished, I realized what I had done: by cutting my father's likeness out of the newspaper, I had removed him from the world." The collection crescendoes in displays of raw creative power, as in "Eight Plots," a rapid-fire of three- and four-sentence summaries, and the brilliant, impressionistic "!" Blood and Soap is an arresting collection from one of a small number of writers on the vanguard of American fiction. Linh Dinh is the author of the story collection Fake House (Seven Stories Press, 2000), as well as several collections of poems, and is the editor of Night, Again (Seven Stories Press, 1996), a collection of Vietnamese fiction. His work has been anthologized in Best American Poetry 2000 and Great American Prose Poems: From Poe to the Present and has appeared in American Poetry Review.
ReviewsPress Reviews
Philadelphia Inquirer May 5, 2004
A sort of Vietnamese Edgar Allan Poe for the 21st century . . . lyric qualities infuse Dinh's short fiction. So does a mordant sense of humor, and an immigrant's unceasing sense of not quite fitting
- Susan Balée
...more
Brooklyn Rail May 5, 2005
The total effect of Blood and Soap is impossible to describe. . . . It owes a certain debt to Jorge Luis Borges, but uses Borgesian metafiction and genre-bending to depict a sense of absurdity, confusion, and displacement peculiar to being a contemporary world citizen.
- Matthew Sharpe
|
We also suggest
Contemporary Fiction from Cuba
1999 Edition
The third book in our award-winning series of contemporary fiction anthologies, Dream With No Name presents some of the best short fiction coming out of Cuba.

