Synopses & Reviews
David Walton's collection of eight stories, five of which are set in Pittsburgh, offers darkly humorous meditations on modern life. In "Skin and Bone" an unexpected, strange, and ultimately tragic encounter between a karate student and his instructor raises questions about guilt and responsibility. "The Sundeck" touches on sex, loneliness, and the difficulty for people to meaningfully connect. In the title story, a dinner party attended by a struggling academic begins with the toast "No more angst or ennui" only to end in hostility and disaster. Evening Out was the first book to win the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction.
Review
“Walton’s obvious affection for his characters, his dry, understated humor and his fine ear for the significant subtexts that lie beneath the banalities and half-sentences that intelligent people usually utter to one another give his better stories a gentle power.”—Russell Banks, New York Times Book Review
Review
“Often whimsical but finally quite acute presentations of middle-class hopes and desperations.”—Alan Cheuse
Review
“There are many pleasures in Evening Out, not the least of which is Walton’s sharp ear for the facades in our consumer society.”—Bloomsbury Review
Review
"Walton's voice is clearly his own— and it's one well worth listening to, since it does weird and wonderful things to what he calls 'the banality of the present age.'"—James Frakes
Review
“The overall impression is one of originality and an attempt to explore life as it is, without manufactured drama or histrionics.”—Booklist
About the Author
David Walton is now retired from teaching English at the University of Pittsburgh. He is the author of one other short story collection,
Waiting in Line, and a novel,
Ride. He lives in Pittsburgh.
Table of Contents
Evening Out 11
Moogle Boogled 37
Synaphongenuphon 51
The Gingerbread House 69
Skin and Bone 99
Easy to Believe 145
The Lid 163
The Sundeck 181