We're All In This Together: A Novella and Stories

by Owen King

Paperback, 2006

Status

Available

Call number

813.6

Collection

Publication

Bloomsbury USA (2006), Paperback, 242 pages

Description

Fiction. Literature. Short Stories. HTML:Imaginative, gripping stories, along with the brilliant title novella set in Maine after the 2000 election, carry the weight of real emotion and revelation and showcase the impressive versatility of a rising talent. Owen King is a writer interested in the choices we make when we're most conflicted. A young husband must decide whether or not to commit a ghoulish crime; a baseball player in a fantastic 1930s Coney Island is assailed by the guilt of an illicit romance; a nineteenth-century itinerant dentist finds himself snowed in with a group of trappers for a long evening of primitive surgery and laughing gas reveries. Whether they're set in the past or the present, tinged with the macabre, the solemn, or the absurd, all of the stories in this collection carry the weight of real emotion and revelation and showcase King's impressive versatility. In his novella, King tells the story of George, the teenage son of a single mother, and the only grandson of a family of union organizers in Maine. George's grandfather Henry, obsessed with the outcome of the 2000 election, has planted a giant billboard of homage to Al Gore in his front yard that he suspects has been defaced by the paperboy, now a sworn enemy. Meanwhile, George's mother is about to marry Dr. Vic, who, besides being possessed of an almost royal obliviousness, may even have voted for George W. Bush. George is a nervous accomplice to his grandfather's increasingly unhinged behavior, and a righteous adversary at war with his mother over her marriage. George's struggle is a funny and moving parallel for our times: How will we fight? All together, or all alone? Funny, insightful, and always entertaining, We're All in This Together launches the career of an extraordinarily talented writer.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member bookswoman
I mostly like this set of a novella and short stories. Owen King obviously has a lot of talent and some of the same interests as his famous father.

The novella was the most compelling of the pieces, I think having a little longer format helped to flesh out the characters and the plotting. While I
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didn't dislike the short stories I did have less connection with the characters. The stories were all very well done but I found myself wishing for more.

I'll be reading more by Mr. King.
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LibraryThing member JReynolds1959
George is a young boy whose mother is going to marry Dr. Vic. George doesn't really care for Dr. Vic, as he is a bit of a "square". George's grandfather was a union guy, always mentioning union cases and circumstances. His grandfather believes that Al Gore should have won the election and has
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planted a large sign on his front lawn stating so.
There are shenanigans going on with the paper boy, grandfather's best friend, Gil, and others. Every person having their opinions about the election.
This novella is funny and very well written. I can't remember the last time I actually laughed out loud while reading a book. Owen King made me do that.
The short stories are succinct, although I had a hard time really understanding their meaning. But still well written.
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Physical description

242 p.; 8.24 inches

ISBN

1582345880 / 9781582345888
Page: 0.3229 seconds