Synopses & Reviews
Though David Galef may be best known for his novels
Flesh and
Turning Japanese, he has also published over sixty short stories in magazines ranging from the
British Punch to the
Czech Prague Revue, the
Canadian Prism International, and the
American Shenandoah. The fifteen stories selected for
Laugh Track are an eclectic mix, ranging from a haunting vignette called "You," to "Triptych," the tale of an elementary school teacher whose men in her life include a precocious third-grader.
In the title story, a failed comedian brings a recorded laugh track to his regular Wednesday psychoanalytic session. During the sometimes tortuous, often hilarious course of treatment, he finally succeeds in displacing his blocked impulsesi--to the extreme discomfort of his therapist. In "All Cretans," a lovelorn tourist in Greece gets ensnared in a set of ancient philosophical paradoxes. In "The Web of Möbius," what's left of a once-murderous psychotic's life revolves in a bizarrely twisted circle.
Laugh Track offers fifteen different worlds--from a blocked expatriate writer in Mexico, to a drug heist gone wrong in downtown Manhattan, to a love affair pursued at the last leper colony in the United States.
These are stories that flirt with the veil of fantasy and yet in the end reveal the all-too-vulnerable side of humanity. Like so many people, Galef's characters are searching for something in life that will solve everything--but the results are unpredictable, to say the least.
David Galef is an associate professor of English at the University of Mississippi. In addition to his two novels and many short stories, his essays and reviews have appeared in the New York Times, Twentieth Century Literature, and other publications. His eight previous books include Japanese translations, literary criticism, and children's stories.
Praise for Flesh:
"Galef's candid reflections on Southern culture, his entertaining lampoon of academic manners, and his supporting characters are as uproarious and engaging as his ribald plot."
--Library Journal
"Flesh is a constantly pleasurable experience to read; it possesses in abundance style and intelligence, and above all a huge zest for life."
--D. M. Thomas
Synopsis
Though David Galef may be best known for his novels
Flesh and
Turning Japanese, he has also published over sixty short stories in magazines ranging from the
British Punch to the
Czech Prague Revue, the
Canadian Prism International, and the
American Shenandoah. The fifteen stories selected for
Laugh Track are an eclectic mix, ranging from a haunting vignette called "You," to "Triptych," the tale of an elementary school teacher whose men in her life include a precocious third-grader.
In the title story, a failed comedian brings a recorded laugh track to his regular Wednesday psychoanalytic session. During the sometimes tortuous, often hilarious course of treatment, he finally succeeds in displacing his blocked impulsesi--to the extreme discomfort of his therapist. In "All Cretans," a lovelorn tourist in Greece gets ensnared in a set of ancient philosophical paradoxes. In "The Web of Möbius," what's left of a once-murderous psychotic's life revolves in a bizarrely twisted circle.
Laugh Track offers fifteen different worlds--from a blocked expatriate writer in Mexico, to a drug heist gone wrong in downtown Manhattan, to a love affair pursued at the last leper colony in the United States.
These are stories that flirt with the veil of fantasy and yet in the end reveal the all-too-vulnerable side of humanity. Like so many people, Galef's characters are searching for something in life that will solve everything--but the results are unpredictable, to say the least.
David Galef is an associate professor of English at the University of Mississippi. In addition to his two novels and many short stories, his essays and reviews have appeared in the New York Times, Twentieth Century Literature, and other publications. His eight previous books include Japanese translations, literary criticism, and children's stories.
Praise for Flesh:
"Galef's candid reflections on Southern culture, his entertaining lampoon of academic manners, and his supporting characters are as uproarious and engaging as his ribald plot."
--Library Journal
"Flesh is a constantly pleasurable experience to read; it possesses in abundance style and intelligence, and above all a huge zest for life."
--D. M. Thomas
Synopsis
Ingenious short fiction from the author of the novels Flesh and Turning Japanese