Stories of small-town life on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.
The stories in No Longer and Not Yet look at the ways our lives are lived in the split seconds between what is no longer but is still not yet. Most take place on Manhattan’s iconic Upper West Side, in the shops, hallways, and parks that reveal this well-known ’big city’ neighborhood for the tiny, even backwater village it more often resembles. An Upper West Sider herself, Joanna Clapps Herman draws her characters honestly yet tenderly, revealing them as much through how they move-the slope of a shoulder, a vocal inflection, the weight of a football-as by what they do, as though their bodies speak the truths they can’t express.
Here, Hannah Arendt’s ghost haunts the building where she once lived, a hawk carries the apparition of a lost loved one, a homeless woman becomes Demeter. Small moments and intimacies of life weave together to form a bigger picture: the squeak of the hotel bed, a leaf on a saucer, the quality of light in the therapist’s office, the doorman’s familiar jokes, the open cupboards, the unspoken words. These stories show that, although we may think of ourselves in larger mythic narratives, our days are set in the terrain that is the opposite of the vast.
Innehållsförteckning
Roman Bath
Whispers
Falling
Leaves and Brothers
And Not Yet
Asparagus Soup
Passing History
Bebopin’ Baby
Synchronicity
News at 370 Riverside
Two Latins
Framing Darkness
Passed Over and Passed On
Hawk in the City
Taking an Incomplete
Tess Ensconced
Seeding Memory
Occasionally
Perfect Hatred
Love at the Door
Tidal
Gestures
Snow Struck
Something Essential
Questa è la Vita (This is the life)
Om författaren
Joanna Clapps Herman is the author of The Anarchist Bastard: Growing Up Italian in America and No Longer and Not Yet: Stories, both published by SUNY Press. She is also the coeditor (with Carol Bonomo Albright) of Wild Dreams: The Best of Italian Americana and (with Lee Gutkind) Our Roots Are Deep with Passion: Creative Nonfiction Collects New Essays by Italian-American Writers. She lives in New York City.