Dogwalker: Stories by Arthur Bradford

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: August 2002
  • 176pp
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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Customer Reviews
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: August 2002
    • Publisher: Knopf Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 176pp

    Synopsis

    The debut collection of an O.

    Book Magazine

    Bradford constructs his stories using a jumble of absurd, ugly situations and emotionally stunted and clumsy characters. Take, for instance, "Dogs," an overlong piece of surrealism about a man who impregnates his girlfriend's pet, or "The Texas School For the Blind," a four-page fragment about a blind, deaf mute who stabs himself in the leg. When Bradford is able to create convincing characters, they're strangely moving, such as in "Bill McQuill," in which a joker with a drinking problem takes his nagging landlord hostage. Other stories make for good slapstick, like "Mollusks," in which a giant slug nearly destroys a marriage, and "Mattress," in which the narrator braves the ferocious driving of his roommate in order to claim a piece of used bedding being given away across town. The stories in this collection are weird, it's true, and some of them succeed as grotesques. "The House of Alan Matthews," for example, is a funny parody of neighborhood drug dealers that's also genuinely horrifying. But language and tone remain problematic for Bradford, who deliberately occludes the best moments of the book with banal turns of phrase.
    —Kevin Greenberg

    (Excerpted Review)

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    Biography

    Arthur Bradford's fiction has appeared in McSweeney's, Esquire, and The O. Henry Awards. He is also the creator and director of How's Your News?, a traveling news show produced by the denizens of Camp Jabberwocky, the oldest camp for adults with disabilities in the country.

    Customer Reviews

    Dogwalker: Storiesby Anonymous

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    October 20, 2004: Based on the reviews I decided to purchase this book. I would agree that it is an easy read, but that is because the stories are short not because they are entertaining. I was more than disappointed with this book. I found the stories pointless and dumb. I was left feeling like I wasted the two hours I spent reading it. There was a reason that this book was clearanced, it was not worth the $3.00 I paid for it. If you are looking for a humerous book I would recommend looking else where, try the Russian Debutante's Handbook by Gary Shteyngart.

    Dogwalker: Storiesby Anonymous

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    August 31, 2004: This is a wonderful collection of twisted short stories that are full of humor. Great first collection by Bradfurd. Would def. recommend to anyone, except maybe children.


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