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    The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis

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    by Lydia Davis


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    (First Edition)

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    • ISBN-13: 9780312655396
    • Publisher: Picador
    • Publication date: 10/26/2010
    • Edition description: First Edition
    • Pages: 752
    • Product dimensions: 7.54(w) x 11.80(h) x 1.30(d)

    Lydia Davis is the author of one novel and seven story collections, the most recent of which was a finalist for the 2007 National Book Award. She is the recipient of a MacArthur fellowship and was named a Chevalier of the Order of the Arts and Letters by the French government for her fiction and her translations of modern writers, including Maurice Blanchot, Michel Leiris, and Marcel Proust. She is at work on a translation of Madame Bovary.

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    The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis


    By Lydia Davis

    Picador

    Copyright © 2010 Lydia Davis
    All right reserved.

    ISBN: 9780312655396

    THE COLLECTED STORIES OF LYDIA DAVIS Story

    I get home from work and there is a message from him: that he is not coming, that he is busy. He will call again. I wait to hear from him, then at nine o’clock I go to where he lives, find his car, but he’s not home. I knock at his apartment door and then at all the garage doors, not knowing which garage door is his—no answer. I write a note, read it over, write a new note, and stick it in his door. At home I am restless, and all I can do, though I have a lot to do, since I’m going on a trip in the morning, is play the piano. I call again at ten forty-five and he’s home, he has been to the movies with his old girlfriend, and she’s still there. He says he’ll call back. I wait. Finally I sit down and write in my notebook that when he calls me either he will then come to me, or he will not and I will be angry, and so I will have either him or my own anger, and this might be all right, since anger is always a great comfort, as I found with my husband. And then I go on to write, in the third person and the past tense, that clearly she always needed to have a love even if it was a complicated love. He calls back before I have time to finish writing all this down. When he calls, it is a little after eleven thirty. We argue until nearly twelve. Everything he says is a contradiction: for example, he says he did not want to see me because he wanted to work and even more because he wanted to be alone, but he has not worked and he has not been alone. There is no way I can get him to reconcile any of his contradictions, and when this conversation begins to sound too much like many I had with my husband I say goodbye and hang up. I finish writing down what I started to write down even though by now it no longer seems true that anger is any great comfort.

    I call him back five minutes later to tell him that I am sorry about all this arguing, and that I love him, but there is no answer. I call again five minutes later, thinking he might have walked out to his garage and walked back, but again there is no answer. I think of driving to where he lives again and looking for his garage to see if he is in there working, because he keeps his desk there and his books and that is where he goes to read and write. I am in my nightgown, it is after twelve and I have to leave the next morning at five. Even so, I get dressed and drive the mile or so to his place. I am afraid that when I get there I will see other cars by his house that I did not see earlier and that one of them will belong to his old girlfriend. When I drive down the driveway I see two cars that weren’t there before, and one of them is parked as close as possible to his door, and I think that she is there. I walk around the small building to the back where his apartment is, and look in the window: the light is on, but I can’t see anything clearly because of the half-closed venetian blinds and the steam on the glass. But things inside the room are not the same as they were earlier in the evening, and before there was no steam. I open the outer screen door and knock. I wait. No answer. I let the screen door fall shut and I walk away to check the row of garages. Now the door opens behind me as I am walking away and he comes out. I can’t see him very well because it is dark in the narrow lane beside his door and he is wearing dark clothes and whatever light there is is behind him. He comes up to me and puts his arms around me without speaking, and I think he is not speaking not because he is feeling so much but because he is preparing what he will say. He lets go of me and walks around me and ahead of me out to where the cars are parked by the garage doors.

    As we walk out there he says “Look,” and my name, and I am waiting for him to say that she is here and also that it’s all over between us. But he doesn’t, and I have the feeling he did intend to say something like that, at least say that she was here, and that he then thought better of it for some reason. Instead, he says that everything that went wrong tonight was his fault and he’s sorry. He stands with his back against a garage door and his face in the light and I stand in front of him with my back to the light. At one point he hugs me so suddenly that the fire of my cigarette crumbles against the garage door behind him. I know why we’re out here and not in his room, but I don’t ask him until everything is all right between us. Then he says, “She wasn’t here when I called you. She came back later.” He says the only reason she is there is that something is troubling her and he is the only one she can talk to about it. Then he says, “You don’t understand, do you?”

    I try to figure it out.

    So they went to the movies and then came back to his place and then I called and then she left and he called back and we argued and then I called back twice but he had gone out to get a beer (he says) and then I drove over and in the meantime he had returned from buying beer and she had also come back and she was in his room so we talked by the garage doors. But what is the truth? Could he and she both really have come back in that short interval between my last phone call and my arrival at his place? Or is the truth really that during his call to me she waited outside or in his garage or in her car and that he then brought her in again, and that when the phone rang with my second and third calls he let it ring without answering, because he was fed up with me and with arguing? Or is the truth that she did leave and did come back later but that he remained and let the phone ring without answering? Or did he perhaps bring her in and then go out for the beer while she waited there and listened to the phone ring? The last is the least likely. I don’t believe anyway that there was any trip out for beer.

    The fact that he does not tell me the truth all the time makes me not sure of his truth at certain times, and then I work to figure out for myself if what he is telling me is the truth or not, and sometimes I can figure out that it’s not the truth and sometimes I don’t know and never know, and sometimes just because he says it to me over and over again I am convinced it is the truth because I don’t believe he would repeat a lie so often. Maybe the truth does not matter, but I want to know it if only so that I can come to some conclusions about such questions as: whether he is angry at me or not; if he is, then how angry; whether he still loves her or not; if he does, then how much; whether he loves me or not; how much; how capable he is of deceiving me in the act and after the act in the telling.

    THE COLLECTED STORIES OF LYDIA DAVIS Copyright © 2009 by Lydia Davis



    Continues...

    Excerpted from The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis by Lydia Davis Copyright © 2010 by Lydia Davis. Excerpted by permission.
    All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
    Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

    Table of Contents

    BREAK IT DOWN (1986)

    Story

    The Fears of Mrs. Orlando

    Liminal: The Little Man

    Break It Down

    Mr. Burdoff's Visit to Germany

    What She Knew

    The Fish

    Mildred and the Oboe

    The Mouse

    The Letter

    Extracts from a Life

    The House Plans

    The Brother-in-Law

    How W. H. Auden Spends the Night in a Friend's House:

    Mothers

    In a House Besieged

    Visit to Her Husband

    Cockroaches in Autumn

    The Bone

    A Few Things Wrong with Me

    Sketches for a Life of Wassilly

    City Employment

    Two Sisters

    The Mother

    Therapy

    French Lesson I: Le Meurtre

    Once a Very Stupid Man

    The Housemaid

    The Cottages

    Safe Love

    Problem

    What an Old Woman Will Wear

    The Sock

    Five Signs of Disturbance

    ALMOST NO MEMORY (1997)

    Meat, My Husband

    Jack in the Country

    Foucault and Pencil

    The Mice

    The Thirteenth Woman

    The Professor

    The Cedar Trees

    The Cats in the Prison Recreation Hall

    Wife One in Country

    The Fish Tank

    The Center of the Story

    Love

    Our Kindness

    A Natural Disaster

    Odd Behavior

    St. Martin

    Agreement

    In the Garment District

    Disagreement

    The Actors

    What Was Interesting

    In the Everglades

    The Family

    Trying to Learn

    To Reiterate

    Lord Royston's Tour

    The Other

    A Friend of Mine

    This Condition

    Go Away

    Pastor Elaine's Newsletter

    A Man in Our Town

    A Second Chance

    Fear

    Almost No Memory

    Mr. Knockly

    How He Is Often Right

    The Rape of the Tanuk Women

    What I Feel

    Lost Things

    Glenn Could

    Smoke

    From Below, as a Neighbor

    The Great-Grandmothers

    Ethics

    The House Behind

    The Outing

    A Position at the University

    Examples of Confusion

    The Race of the Patient Motorcyclists

    Affinity

    SAMUEL JOHNSON IS INDIGNANT (2001)

    Boring Friends

    A Mown Lawn

    City People

    Betrayal

    The White Tribe

    Our Trip

    Special Chair

    Certain Knowledge from Herodotus

    Priority

    The Meeting

    Companion

    Blind Date

    Examples of Remember

    Old Mother and the Grouch

    Samuel Johnson Is Indignant

    New Year's Resolution

    First Grade: Handwriting Practice

    Interesting

    Happiest Moment

    Jury Duty

    A Double Negative

    The Old Dictionary

    Honoring the Subjunctive

    How Difficult

    Losing Memory

    Letter to a Funeral Parlor

    Thyroid Diary

    Information from the North Concerning the Ice:

    Murder in Bohemia

    Happy Memories

    They Take Turns Using a Word They Like

    Marie Curie, So Honorable Woman

    Mir the Hessian

    My Neighbors in a Foreign Place

    Oral History (with Hiccups)

    The Patient

    Right and Wrong

    Alvin the Typesetter

    Special

    Selfish

    My Husband and I

    Spring Spleen

    Her Damage

    Workingmen

    In a Northern Country

    Away from Home

    Company

    Finances

    The Transformation

    Two Sisters (II)

    The Furnace

    Young and Poor

    The Silence of Mrs. Separate

    Almost Over: Seperate Bedrooms

    Money

    Acknowledgment

    VARIETIES OF DISTURBANCE (2007)

    A Man from her Past

    Dog and Me

    Enlightened

    The Good Taste Contest

    Collaboration with Fly

    Kafka Cooks Dinner

    Tropical Storm

    Good Times

    Idea for a Short Documentary Film

    Forbidden Subjects

    Two Types

    The Senses

    Grammar Questions

    Hand

    The Caterpillar

    Child Care

    We Miss You: A Study of Get-Well Letters from a Class of Fourth-Graders

    Passing Wind

    Television

    Jane and the Cane

    Getting to Know Your Body

    Absentminded

    Southward Bound, Reads Worstward Ho

    The Walk

    Varieties of Disturbance

    Lonely

    Mrs. D and Her Maids

    20 Sculptures in One Hour

    Nietszche

    What You Learn About the Baby

    Her Mother's Mother

    How It Is Done

    Insomnia

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    Lydia Davis is one of our most original and influential writers. She has been called “an American virtuoso of the short story form” (Salon) and “one of the quiet giants . . . of American fiction” (Los Angeles Times Book Review). Now, for the first time, Davis’s short stories will be collected in one volume, from the groundbreaking Break It Down (1986) to the 2007 National Book Award nominee Varieties of Disturbance.

    The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis is an event in American letters.

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    From the Publisher
    Among the true originals of contemporary American short fiction.” —San Francisco Chronicle

     

    “Davis is a magician of self-consciousness. Few writers now working make the words on the page matter more.”  —JONATHAN FRANZEN

    “All who know [Davis’s] work probably remember their first time reading it . . . Blows the roof off of so many of our assumptions about what constitutes short fiction.” —DAVE EGGERS, McSweeney’s

    “Sharp, deft, ironic, understated, and consistently surprising.” —JOYCE CAROL OATES

    “The best prose stylist in America.” —RICK MOODY

     

    "A body of work probably unique in American writing, in its combination of lucidity, aphoristic brevity, formal originality, sly comedy, metaphysical bleakness, philosophical pressure, and human wisdom. I suspect that 'The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis' will in time be seen as one of the great, strange American literary contributions." — James Wood, The New Yorker

     

    "This welcome collection of Lydia Davis’s short fiction, which gathers stories from four previously published volumes, reveals that her obsessions have remained fairly consistent over the past 30 years: frustrated love, the entanglements of language, the writer engaged in the act of writing. But even when Davis traverses familiar territory, her masterful sentence style and peculiar perceptiveness make each work unmistakably distinct. Davis is known for her ability to pack big themes into a tight space; many stories here are less than a page, and some consist of only one sentence. The longer pieces frequently find her narrators making much out of the seemingly meager. In “The Bone,” which first appeared in the collection Break It Down, a woman describes in detached detail the night a fishbone was caught in her now ex-husband’s throat. In “The Mice” a narrator feels rejected by the mice that will not come into her kitchen, “as they come into the kitchens of [her] neighbors.”—Kimberly King Parsons, Time Out New York

     

    "Lydia Davis is one of the best writers in America, a fact that has been kept under wraps by her specialization in short fiction rather than the novel and her discomfort with the idea of one event following another in some sensible pattern, an expectation she frequently plays with, as a kitten will with your fingers. Watch out for those teeth and claws. With the publication of this big book, The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis, Davis might well receive the kind of notice she's long been due. She is the funniest writer I know; the unique pleasure of her wit resides in its being both mordant and beautifully sorrowful (her short piece "Selfish" begins, "The useful thing about being a selfish person is that when your children get hurt you don't mind so much because you yourself are all right," and you can see the regrets that birthed the sentence, even while it cracks you up). Like many great writers of short pieces she is able to convert everyday experience into a light comic drama—cooking for her husband in "Meat, My Husband" or the task of writing in "What Was Interesting"—that builds toward a piercing moment of reality. Some of Davis's stories are only one or two sentences long and many don't exceed two pages, which is good, because seeing them all together in this 700-page volume and surviving the power of the longer ones, you realize you're lucky to be getting out of the book psychically intact—or almost intact. She's that good."—Vince Passaro, O, The Oprah Magazine

     

    "What to do with all the empty white space that drifts over the 733 pages and nearly 200 fictions of The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis? Make origami, maybe. Like Don DeLillo, who drafted Underworld at the pace of one paragraph per sheet of paper—the technique, he once explained, evolved out of "a sensitivity to the actual appearance of words on a page, to letter-shapes and letter-combinations"—Lydia Davis is as much sculptor as writer. "I put that word on the page,/but he added the apostrophe," reads the entirety of one recent story, "Collaboration With Fly." Another, "My Mother's Reaction to My Travel Plans," doesn't even stretch onto a second line: "Gainsville! It's too bad your cousin is dead!'"—Zach Baron, Village Voice

     

    "No one writes a story like Lydia Davis. In the years since she began publishing her lyrical, extremely short fiction, she has quietly become one of the most impactful influences on American writers, even if they don’t know it. That’s largely because she makes economy seem so easy. You could read several of her stories into a friend’s voicemail box before you were cut off (and you should). You could fit one of her stories in this column. Some you could write on your palm."—Jonathan Messinger, Time Out Chicago

     

    "Lydia Davis is the master of a literary form largely of her own invention. Her publisher calls what she writes fiction - and her short prose pieces do have characters, settings and sometimes a plot, however minuscule - while haughtier literary types might think of it as a kind of fleshy prose poetry or designate it "flash fiction." The classically minded and fantasy fans might characterize it as updated fable. Whatever you call them, Davis' little writings are mostly in prose and often less than a page long. They are also unceasingly surprising, deeply empathic, sharply witty, often laugh-out-loud funny and really, really good."—Craig Morgan Teicher, The Cleveland Plain Dealer

     

    "This volume contains the stories from four collections: "Break It Down" (1986), "Almost No Memory" (1997), "Samuel Johnson Is Indignant" (2001) and "Varieties of Disturbance" (2007). They are shocking. Be prepared for a level of self-consciousness (remember, Beckett). Be prepared for narrators with disorienting levels of discomfort (remember, Kafka). Be prepared for moments of beauty that are sharp and merciless (remember, Proust)."—Susan Salter Reynolds, The Los Angeles Times

    James Wood
    Finally, one can read a large portion of Davis's work, spanning three decades and more than seven hundred pages, and a grand cumulative achievement comes into view—a body of work probably unique in American writing, in its combination of lucidity, aphoristic brevity, formal originality, sly comedy, metaphysical bleakness, philosophical pressure, and human wisdom. I suspect that The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis will in time be seen as one of the great, strange American literary contributions, distinct and crookedly personal, like the work of Flannery O'Connor, or Donald Barthelme, or J. F. Powers.
    —The New Yorker
    Jan Stuart
    Davis nervily inhabits obsessive and haunted personas, her intonation shifting with unsettling precision from the sly to the sinister…Davis approaches the short-story form with jazzy experimentation, tinkering with lists, circumlocutions, even interviews where the questions have been creepily edited out. You don't work your way across this mesa-sized collection so much as pogo-stick about, plunging in wherever the springs meet the page.
    —The New York Times
    Library Journal
    This collection marks the first publication of Davis's stories in one volume, including stories from two previous collections, the acclaimed Break It Down and Varieties of Disturbance. Davis's highly original voice ranges from tweetlike one-liners with title ("Index Entry Christian, I'm not a") to longer works of several pages. Many stories are first-person accounts of the narrator analyzing, or overanalyzing, some situation he or she is encountering, as if waking from a dream. As she writes in "Story," "I try to figure it out." Davis, unlike some writers of nontraditional fiction, doesn't take "stop making sense" as her personal motto. Her art lies in getting the reader to look at everyday situations from a new and different perspective. VERDICT This will be prized by those who are already fans of Davis's work and should also appeal to discerning readers of more plot-driven, conventional fiction ready for something challenging and thought-provoking.—Leslie Patterson, Brown Univ. Lib., Providence, RI

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