Ron Rash is the author of the 2009 PEN/Faulkner finalist and New York Times bestseller Serena and Above the Waterfall, in addition to four prizewinning novels, including The Cove, One Foot in Eden, Saints at the River, and The World Made Straight; four collections of poems; and six collections of stories, among them Burning Bright, which won the 2010 Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award, and Chemistry and Other Stories, which was a finalist for the 2007 PEN/Faulkner Award. Twice the recipient of the O. Henry Prize, he teaches at Western Carolina University.
Nothing Gold Can Stay
by Ron Rash
eBook
$8.24
-
ISBN-13:
9780062202734
- Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
- Publication date: 02/19/2013
- Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 256
- Sales rank: 203,922
- File size: 246 KB
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
8.24
In Stock
From Ron Rash, PEN / Faulkner Award finalist and New York Times bestselling author of Serena, comes a new collection of unforgettable stories set in Appalachia that focuses on the lives of those haunted by violence and tenderness, hope and fear—spanning the Civil War to the present day.
The darkness of Ron Rash’s work contrasts with its unexpected sensitivity and stark beauty in a manner that could only be accomplished by this master of the short story form.
Nothing Gold Can Stay includes 14 stories, including Rash’s “The Trusty,” which first appeared in The New Yorker.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- Woe to Live On: A Novel
- by Daniel WoodrellRon Rash
-
- Burning Bright: Stories
- by Ron Rash
-
- The World Made Straight: A…
- by Ron Rash
-
- The Outlaw Album
- by Daniel Woodrell
-
- Goat Mountain: A Novel
- by David Vann
-
- The Secret Lives of People in…
- by Simon Van Booy
-
- Saints at the River: A Novel
- by Ron Rash
-
- Brief Encounters with Che…
- by Ben Fountain
-
- When the Nines Roll Over and…
- by David Benioff
-
- All Aunt Hagar's Children:…
- by Edward P. Jones
-
- Married Love: And Other…
- by Tessa Hadley
-
- The Rabbit Factory: A Novel
- by Larry Brown
-
- Give Us a Kiss
- by Daniel WoodrellPinckney Benedict
Recently Viewed
The Washington Post - Michael Lindgren
With Nothing Gold Can Stay, Ron Rash cements his reputation as one of the foremost chroniclers of that mythic uber-America known as the South. Rash's new stories depict, with almost anthropological precision, a proud, poverty-scarred milieu "where checkbooks never quite balanced and repo men and pawnbrokers loomed one turn of bad luck away."The New York Times - Janet Maslin
Ron Rash's new short story collection…is this Appalachian author's best book since his 2008 Serena…Nothing Gold Can Stay is excitingly versatile, covering time periods from the Civil War to the present and ranging in mood from wryly comic to brutal. The 14 stories are united by clean, tough specificity, courtly backwoods diction, and a capacity for sending shivers.Richmond Times-Dispatch
[Rash] bears comparison to the world’s truly great story writers—particularly Nathaniel Hawthorne for the gothic horrors that lie in the human heart and Anton Chekhov for his unflinching eye and his ability to capture a character in a single gesture.St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Each of the stories in this collection comes to life under the power of Rash’s muscular way with words...The author creates a slice of life so authentic you can hear the rushing water and see the falling tears.Elle
Ron Rash’s fifth story collection, NOTHING GOLD CAN STAY, set in hardscrabble Appalachia, has a tone and temperament like that of his compatriot Eudora Welty, with a twist of Barry Hannah.Wall Street Journal
Crime, with its violence, threads through the butcher’s-dozen of stories in the author’s masterly 14th book, Nothing Gold Can Stay, as inexorably as it winds through the problematic lives of his Appalachian-dwelling characters.Atlanta Journal-Constitution
[Rash’s] starkly beautiful prose has mapped the heart and soul of southern Appalachia in a way few writers of his generation can match. . . A splendid new collection. . . shimmering, liquid poetry. . .Kansas City Star
Nothing Gold Can Stay is a gripping collection, raw and real, that solidifies Rash as a powerful and imaginative storyteller.Janet Maslin
Ron Rash’s Nothing Gold Can Stay is [his] best book since Serena. Excitingly versatile. . . The stories are united by clean, tough specificity, courtly backwoods diction, and a capacity for sending shivers. (Alfred Hitchcock would have loved the story ‘A Sort of Miracle’).New York Magazine
A collection of short stories about Appalachia that are actually more like diamonds: cold, glittering, valuable.Washington Post
With NOTHING GOLD CAN STAY, Ron Rash cements his reputation as one of the foremost chroniclers of that mythic uber-America known as the South. . . At his best, Rash evokes an understated poignancy that is genuinely affecting. . .Washington Independent Review of Books
Masterfully crafted. The best of Rash’s stories, written in a spare prose style, have an aching lyricism as they chronicle the hard times and hard fall of his characters. The best of the best will haunt the reader long after they’re done.Miami Herald
The stories of Nothing Gold Can Stay are tough-minded, surprising, illuminating even when Rash leaves much unsaid (often the reader comprehends more than the characters can). But no matter when they are set or who they concern, these stories are kin to each other.Scott Simon
Mesmerized by Ron Rash’s new NOTHING GOLD CAN STAY. Short stories that play on for a long time in your mind.Booklist
. . . a wonderful collection.Boston Globe
A lovely, essential new collection of stories . . . lyrical and honest, grounded in place yet sweeping in scope. . . . .[Rash’s] prose is elegant, suggestive, and Hardyesque.Minneapolis Star Tribune
Striking . . . engaging . . . mesmerizing . . . After finishing this collection, one simply just wants to read more of Ron Rash.Charlotte Observer
In his new collection of stories, Ron Rash stunningly renders his native Appalachia as an exotic planetoid governed by its own peculiar orbital laws . . . Rash is a fast-rising superstar in the North Carolina literary constellation that includes such luminaries as Michael Parker, Clyde Edgerton and Phillip Gerard.Library Journal
His previous novels Serena and The Cove are set in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina, so it is no surprise that Rash (Appalachian studies, Western Carolina Univ.) sets this collection of short stories in the same loosely defined but culturally abundant geographic region of the eastern United States. He captures this richness in "A Servant of History," wherein a capricious young scholar attempts to record lost British ballads from the memory of an elderly Appalachian woman before she passes away. At the same time, the stories also articulate revelations of human vulnerability to the surrounding environmental conditions. In "A Sort of Miracle," an accountant dies of hypothermia after falling into a frozen lake. Rash's short stories thematically paint Appalachia not as a definitive place but as a series of many interconnected ways of relating to human and environmental frailty. VERDICT Another fine addition to the Rash bibliography, and a great entry point for the uninitiated reader. Those who enjoy the writing of Silas House and Sharyn McCrumb will be drawn into Rash's Appalachia.—Joshua Finnell, Denison Univ. Lib., Granville, OH