Pure Hollywood and other stories

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Average Rating
Publisher
Varies, see individual formats and editions
Publication Date
2018.
Language
English

Description

Pure Hollywood is pure gold.”—Ottessa MoshfeghThe sensational new story collection from one of our sharpest, most original, and daringly cinematic stylists, National Book Award finalist and O Henry Prize winner Christine Schutt. In one eponymous novella and ten stories, Pure Hollywood brings us into private worlds of corrupt familial love, intimacy, longing, and danger. From an alcoholic widowed actress living in desert seclusion to a young mother whose rejection of her child has terrible consequences, from a newlywed couple who ignore the violent warnings of a painter burned by love to an eerie portrait of erotic obsession, each story is an imagistic snapshot of what it means to live and learn, love and hurt.  With Pure Hollywood Christine Schutt gives us sharply suspenseful and masterfully dark interior portraits of ordinary lives, infused with her signature observation and surprise. Timeless, incisive, and precise, these tales are a rush of blood to the head, portals through which we open our eyes and see the world anew.   

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Contributors
ISBN
9780802127617
9780802165657

Table of Contents

From the Book - First edition.

Pure Hollywood
The hedges
Species of special concern
A happy rural seat of various view, Lucinda's garden
The Duchess of Albany
Family man
Where you live? when you need me?
Burst pods, gone-by, tangled aster
The Dot sisters
Oh, the obvious
The lady from Connecticut.

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Schutt's (All Souls, 2008) short stories portray flawed characters wrestling with resentment, loneliness, and mortality. The titular story follows colorful Mimi after the death of her much older comedian husband. Left with no inheritance, she is forced out of their Los Angeles home, prompting her to set out to find her childhood abode, assailed by haunting memories of her and her brother's past. Tactile elements generate an anxious sense of dilapidation and internal confrontation. The accompanying 10 tales, varied in length, feature pairings husband and wife, parent and child, siblings as they navigate landscapes both familiar and unsettling. The Hedges carries an uneasy sense of premonition as a couple vacations at a posh resort with their young son. In The Duchess of Albany, an aging mother grapples with her twin daughters while struggling with addiction and loss. The brief, punchy The Dot Sisters finds two sisters freed from familial strife yet hovering at an existential precipice. Schutt's restrained, provoking tales hold detailed impressions at arm's length, as it were, leaving readers to explore life's uneasy truths viewed through an unrelenting lens.--Strauss, Leah Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Nobody writes like Schutt, the National Book Award-finalist author of Florida, and her latest collection is the perfect entry point for readers new to her work. In the title novella, an alcoholic, recently widowed actress leaves her sprawling estate to face violence and oblivion in the desert. "The Hedges" and "A Happy Rural Seat of Various View: Lucinda's Garden" both feature self-absorbed young couples carelessly risking horrific tragedy. Troubled adults sit in gardens, resigned to their fates, in both "Species of Special Concern" and "The Duchess of Albany." In each of the collection's 11 stories, Schutt gives readers dissipated women staggering to the brink of sanity, desperate men with foggy intentions, and an eerie atmosphere that radiates menace, sexuality, and murder. But Schutt's prose is the main attraction: an aged father is "masseused and smooth as a skinned almond," the pleasures of gardening are described in terms of routine ("they watered the deep beds; they flourished arcs; they beaded hooded plants and frangible rues"), and an ominous stranger is said to have a "seer voice, the old, pocked, vacant voice, prophesying horrors they could not imagine." Schutt is always in control in this work by an experimental American writer of unparalleled style. Agent: Gail Hochman, Brandt & Hochman Literary. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Library Journal Review

O. Henry Prize winner Schutt's collection includes a novella and ten stories that examine the dark side of the human psyche with surgical precision. From the Hollywood trophy wife grappling with her late husband's demise to the woman from Connecticut who contemplates her journey from optimistic youth to discontented middle age to the neglectful couple whose toddler suffers the consequences of their inattention, these stories offer brief and sometimes brutal vignettes from the lives of ordinary people. Schutt's prose is sparse and poetic, offering an intimate glimpse, a taste, a tease, a miniature window into the life of each character. Love, negligence, irresponsibility, accident, and obsession combine with loss to make each story an event readers will remember vividly. VERDICT This book will appeal to short story fans, especially those who enjoy the writing styles of J.D. -Salinger and Katherine Mansfield. [See Prepub Alert, 10/5/17.]-Joanna Burkhardt, Univ. of Rhode Island Libs., Providence © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

Ten stories and a novella that give us oblique glimpses of tragedy.Schutt's (Prosperous Friends, 2012, etc.) distinct and economic style is on full display throughout this slim collection. She makes use of parentheticals frequently. In "The Duchess of Albany," the main character recalls her late husband's old age in an off-camera, single-sentence scene: "(Owen at the long table, saying to the ringing phone, Go away, people. Leave us alone,' and people pretty much did)." Schutt offers surprising reminders of the ghastly and gruesome that are never too far away. The second and penultimate stories, "The Hedges" and "Oh, the Obvious," feature accidents that occur on vacations. In each, the narrative perspective makes the reader essentially a bystander witnessing terrible, even fatal, events that befall a stranger. In "Where You Live, When You Need Me?" a mother recounts the summer when Ella, a much-needed babysitter, appeared out of nowhere. "Everyone shared Ella. She had work every day if she wanted." Nobody ever even knew Ella's last name, and this was no innocent time of naivet. Indeed, this was 1984, "the summer when little parts of little bodies turned up in KFC buckets in Dumpsters in the city." The title piece, the novella, layers the tragedy. We open on a California wildfire and then meet Mimi, a young, recent widow of a famous comedian who was four decades her senior. We see Mimi relive her own troubled childhood before she becomes an unintentional witness to another family's tragedy. Through this, the novellalike the collectionmaintains a dark wit that keeps it buoyant. In a tense conversation with her late husband's son, Mimi is asked, "What did you and my dad ever have in common?" She answers with the perfect punch line, "He didn't really like his kids and neither do I."Intimate portrayals of darkness told in Schutt's tight and affecting prose. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

Schutt's (All Souls, 2008) short stories portray flawed characters wrestling with resentment, loneliness, and mortality. The titular story follows colorful Mimi after the death of her much older comedian husband. Left with no inheritance, she is forced out of their Los Angeles home, prompting her to set out to find her childhood abode, assailed by haunting memories of her and her brother's past. Tactile elements generate an anxious sense of dilapidation and internal confrontation. The accompanying 10 tales, varied in length, feature pairings—husband and wife, parent and child, siblings—as they navigate landscapes both familiar and unsettling. "The Hedges" carries an uneasy sense of premonition as a couple vacations at a posh resort with their young son. In "The Duchess of Albany," an aging mother grapples with her twin daughters while struggling with addiction and loss. The brief, punchy "The Dot Sisters" finds two sisters freed from familial strife yet hovering at an existential precipice. Schutt's restrained, provoking tales hold detailed impressions at arm's length, as it were, leaving readers to explore life's uneasy truths viewed through an unrelenting lens. Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

A National Book Award finalist for Florida and a Pulitzer Prize finalist for All Souls, Schutt is also a two-time winner of the O. Henry Prize, and the characters in these love-hurts stories range from a young mother who rejects her child with tragic consequences to a widowed actress succumbing to alcohol while living alone in the desert. Expect elegant, chiseled language; a big boost at PLA and ALA.

Copyright 2017 Library Journal.

Copyright 2017 Library Journal.
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Library Journal Reviews

Nobody writes like Schutt, the National Book Award–finalist author of Florida, and her latest collection is the perfect entry point for readers new to her work. In the title novella, an alcoholic, recently widowed actress leaves her sprawling estate to face violence and oblivion in the desert. "The Hedges" and "A Happy Rural Seat of Various View: Lucinda's Garden" both feature self-absorbed young couples carelessly risking horrific tragedy. Troubled adults sit in gardens, resigned to their fates, in both "Species of Special Concern" and "The Duchess of Albany." In each of the collection's 11 stories, Schutt gives readers dissipated women staggering to the brink of sanity, desperate men with foggy intentions, and an eerie atmosphere that radiates menace, sexuality, and murder. But Schutt's prose is the main attraction: an aged father is "masseused and smooth as a skinned almond," the pleasures of gardening are described in terms of routine ("they watered the deep beds; they flourished arcs; they beaded hooded plants and frangible rues"), and an ominous stranger is said to have a "seer voice, the old, pocked, vacant voice, prophesying horrors they could not imagine." Schutt is always in control in this work by an experimental American writer of unparalleled style. Agent: Gail Hochman, Brandt & Hochman Literary. (Mar.)

Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Nobody writes like Schutt, the National Book Award–finalist author of Florida, and her latest collection is the perfect entry point for readers new to her work. In the title novella, an alcoholic, recently widowed actress leaves her sprawling estate to face violence and oblivion in the desert. "The Hedges" and "A Happy Rural Seat of Various View: Lucinda's Garden" both feature self-absorbed young couples carelessly risking horrific tragedy. Troubled adults sit in gardens, resigned to their fates, in both "Species of Special Concern" and "The Duchess of Albany." In each of the collection's 11 stories, Schutt gives readers dissipated women staggering to the brink of sanity, desperate men with foggy intentions, and an eerie atmosphere that radiates menace, sexuality, and murder. But Schutt's prose is the main attraction: an aged father is "masseused and smooth as a skinned almond," the pleasures of gardening are described in terms of routine ("they watered the deep beds; they flourished arcs; they beaded hooded plants and frangible rues"), and an ominous stranger is said to have a "seer voice, the old, pocked, vacant voice, prophesying horrors they could not imagine." Schutt is always in control in this work by an experimental American writer of unparalleled style. Agent: Gail Hochman, Brandt & Hochman Literary. (Mar.)

Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.
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