Bang Crunch by Neil Smith

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: January 2008
  • 256pp
  • Sales Rank: 617,653

    Reader Rating: (1 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Characters" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2008
    • Publisher: Random House Inc
    • Format: Paperback, 256pp
    • Sales Rank: 617,653

    Synopsis

    In Neil Smith’s nine stories, average people find themselves in decidedly unusual situations, as the mundane and the fantastic collide. A woman mourning the loss of her husband finds solace in talking to his ashes, entombed in a curling stone. The title story zeroes in on a girl with Fred Hoyle syndrome, whose age expands and contracts like the universe. The members of a support group for people with benign tumors begin to suspect that their meekness has caused their medical woes.

    Bang Crunch creates an extraordinary world inhabited by all-too-human characters, and heralds the arrival of a literary talent with an unfailing, exacting concern for the profundities of our lives.

    Publishers Weekly

    Montreal-based translator Smith debuts with nine stories, some of which hit the mark. In "The B9ers," a man forms a support group for people who have had benign tumors removed, and that's where the action stops: a weak subplot involving fraud by a representative of an orphanage fails to give the story much bite. In "Isolettes," a woman has a baby with the use of her friend's sperm, yet when catastrophe strikes after the birth, the general airlessness of the writing makes it hard to access her feelings. Similarly, the collection's longest story, "Jaybird," profiles an ambitious actor led into an extremely revealing performance by his agent's secretary under false pretenses, but the denouement unfolds mutedly. Smith's poise finds its best home in "Extremities," which follows a pair of gloves from one owner to another and finally through a murder, and in the title story, in which a woman ages forward too rapidly, and then backward just as rapidly. (Jan.)

    Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

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    Biography

    Neil Smith is a Montreal writer. He has won an honorable mention at the National Magazine Awards in Canada, first prize at the Eden Mills Writers' Festival, and was nominated for the Journey Prize, one of Canada's most prestigous literary awards, three times. He is also a French translator.

    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

    Great Canadian Authorby cindysloveofbooksarcCS

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    October 18, 2008: This is a collection of 9 short stories, which by the way is Neil Smith's debut novel. He is a Canadian author living in Montreal, QC. The characters in all the short stories are all average people who end up in unexpected situations. The stories all vary in plot but the settings are all the same. The stories are all based around Montreal locations. (Its always nice to read books that take place in your city.)

    The first story called Isolettes opens like this "Blue tube, green tube, clear tube, fat tube" The story is about An who has just had a premature baby with her gay friend Jacob. The details of the premature baby are so exact that you feel as though you are in the Nick U with the baby.

    The story of Green Florescent protein is about a 17 year old boy, Max who is struggling to admit his attraction to his friend. There is also another story about Max's mother Funny Weird or Funny Ha Ha. Where she talks about growing up watching reruns of I Love Lucy. She talks about her husband and how he died. She put his ashes in a curling stone.

    The B9ers is about the struggle of a group of people trying to return to normal life after finding out they all have benign tumors. They don?t get the support they need since their tumors aren't malignant.

    The Bang Crunch is about Eepie a girl with Fred Hoyle?s Syndrome, which ages her a year a day until she reaches 80 and then she goes back in time.

    Those are just a few examples of the stories that are in the book. I really enjoyed reading them. Its been awhile since I have read short stories. Looking forward to reading some more.