Fiction Short Stories (single Author)
A Place Remote
Stories
- Publisher
- West Virginia University Press
- Initial publish date
- Sep 2020
- Category
- Short Stories (single author), Small Town & Rural
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781949199611
- Publish Date
- Sep 2020
- List Price
- $23.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
From farm to factory, alcoholism to war wounds, friendship to betrayal, the stories in A Place Remote take us intimately into the hearts of people from all walks of life in a rural Ohio town. Whether they stay in their town or leave for distant places, these characters come to realize no one is immune to the fictions people tell others—and themselves—to survive.
In each of these ten stories, Gwen Goodkin forces her characters to face the dramatic events of life head-on—some events happen in a moment, while others are the fallout of years or decades of turning away. A boy is confronted by the cost of the family farm, an optometrist careens toward an explosive mental disaster, a mourning teen protects his sister, lifelong friends have an emotional confrontation over an heirloom, and a high school student travels to Germany to find his voice and, finally, a moment of long-awaited redemption.
About the author
Contributor Notes
Gwen Goodkin holds an MFA in creative writing from the University of British Columbia and is the recipient of the Folio Editor’s Prize and the John Steinbeck Award for Fiction.
Editorial Reviews
“Gwen Goodkin’s debut short story collection follows in the tradition of other meteoric writers like Jayne Anne Phillips, Mary Gaitskill, Lauren Groff, and so many before them, heralding a new, sui generis voice that promises so much to come.”
Rex Pickett, author of Sideways and The Archivist
“Some of the stories in A Place Remote resemble the strong and deep feeling of Sherwood Anderson’s collection Winesburg, Ohio that put the American heartland under a microscope in the early years of the last century. Other stories speak to the zany, contemporary world of the twenty-first century, in that same place. What makes Gwen Goodkin’s stories so important is that with wit and compassion they touch on the desire to return to the strong loyalty and its values that this America tugs us back to.”
Mark Jay Mirsky, editor of Fiction and professor of English, City College of New York