The collected Breece D'J Pancake : stories, fragments, letters /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Pancake, Breece D'J, 1952-1979, author.
Uniform title:Works. Selections
Imprint:New York, New York : Library of America, [2020]
©2020
Description:xxviii, 356 pages ; 21 cm.
Language:English
Series:Library of America ; Special Publication
Library of America ; Special Publication.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12534566
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Phillips, Jayne Anne, 1952- author.
ISBN:9781598536720
1598536729
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary:A definitive edition of the haunted and haunting stories of the legendary West Virginia writer, with rare unfinished stories and fragments and revealing letters. Breece D'J Pancake published only a handful of stories before he took his own life in 1979, just shy of his twenty-seventh birthday. Those stories and a small number of others found among his papers after his death comprise the remarkable posthumous collection The Stories of Breece D'J Pancake (1983), recognized at the time as "an American Dubliners" (Jayne Anne Phillips) and a collection by a "young writer of such extraordinary gifts that one is tempted to compare his debut to Hemingway's" (Joyce Carol Oates). Kurt Vonnegut called him "merely the best writer, the most sincere writer I've ever read. " Today his diverse admirers include Margaret Atwood, Andre Dubus III, Tom Waits, and Lorde. . . The Collected Breece D'J Pancake brings together the original landmark book, several story drafts and fragments, and a selection of Pancake's letters to offer an unprecedented picture of his life and art. Among the unfinished stories are fragments from Pancake's two planned novels. The letters document his relationship with writers such as Peter Taylor, John Casey, James Alan McPherson, and Mary Lee Settle, and offer a picture of his collaborative relationship with his mother, who sent him newspaper clippings and helped him research his stories. . . "Pancake's stories are the only stories written in just this way," Jayne Anne Phillips writes in her introduction, "from inside the minds of protagonists coming of age in the mountains of an Appalachian world closed to others. " At once beautiful and relentlessly bleak, the stories concern miners, truckers, farmers, waitresses, and others facing constricted economic and life prospects. In one way or another, his characters are stuck, hoping for a change in fortune they can neither relinquish nor quite bring themselves to believe in, the land and the past making equally strong claims on their darkening present.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this vibrant collection, Pancake's quirky, indelible prose is shadowed by the poignancy of his personal history. An intense, artistic misfit from rural West Virginia, Pancake died by suicide in 1979 at age 26, four years before The Stories of Breece D'J Pancake was published. In the front matter, Jayne Ann Phillips claims Pancake produced "some of the best short stories written anywhere, at any time," and James Alan McPherson notes how Pancake synthesized a Hemingway style with themes and characters inspired by his home state. And, indeed, the stories live up to the hype. Pancake balances muscular precision and economy with rich, evocative detail. In "The Mark," a struggling couple brushes aside the difficulties of the wife's pregnancy to take their prize bull, Pride and Promise, to a fair. "Fox Hunters" offers a bracing slice of West Virginia life, complete with junk cars in various stages of repair and an opossum or two. The successful protagonist of "The Salvation of Me" learns that you can't go home again. In addition to the stories and five fragments, the book includes a lengthy section of Pancake's letters, which reads like a memoir. With its impressive quantity of annotation and tribute, this omnibus offers Pancake fans a deeper look at the artist and will go a long way to inviting others to join this legion. (Oct.)

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review