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Fiction Short Stories (single Author)

Telling My Love Lies

by (author) Keath Fraser

Publisher
Porcupine's Quill
Initial publish date
Oct 1996
Category
Short Stories (single author), Canadian, General
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780889841796
    Publish Date
    Oct 1996
    List Price
    $16.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Out of print

This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.

Description

Telling My Love Lies begins romantically in the hot and prickly cornfields of pubescent youth, lambent with country-and-western songs of the narrator's past, and concludes in operatic San Francisco, the refuge of an older narrator in elegiac flight from an imprisoning tire farm and the taint of glory holes.

In between, in these doubly imagined stories, a lover of rock 'n' roll flies to a Mexican Club Med seeking solace for her lost voice; the ex-botany teacher who's a deported war criminal jets back to Holland in disgrace and handcuffs; a retired doctor and his wife drift out of control in a balloon's gondola over the Gulf of Thailand; while a socialist Sikh politician takes rhetorical flight in his own soaring craft above a river. This is the same river where another character, dying, fishes illegally for the timeless sturgeon.

What anchors these nine interlocking stories and one novella is the community of Perumbur, alive with lakes and hot springs, blueberry farms and cold wars. Keath Fraser's anthology of richly painted characters is an ardent, beautiful celebration of their yearning and of the story-telling imagination.

About the author

Keath Fraser's stories and novellas have been reprinted in numerous Canadian and international anthologies. His essays on writing are reprinted in the anthologyHow Stories Mean(PQL, 1993). He is the author of two earlier acclaimed story collections, Taking Cover (Oberon, 1982) and Foreign Affairs (Stoddart, 1985). His novel, Popular Anatomy (PQL, 1995), won the 1996 Chapters/Books in Canada First Novel Award. He has travelled extensively throughout the world and has edited the best selling international anthologies Bad Trips (Vintage, 1991) and Worst Journeys: The Picador Book of Travel (1992). He was born and raised in Vancouver, where he lives at present, and is a director of Canada India Village Aid (CIVA).

Keath Fraser's profile page