fiction_titles – BkMk Press https://www.bkmkpress.org fine books since 1971 Wed, 03 Nov 2021 23:07:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 One of Us https://www.bkmkpress.org/fiction_titles/one-of-us/ Wed, 01 Jul 2020 17:03:00 +0000 https://www.bkmkpress.org/?post_type=fiction_titles&p=907 Learn more]]> Winner of the G. S. Sharat Chandra Prize for Short Fiction, selected by Amina Gautier

The story “Liberté” from One of Us is included in Best American Short Stories 2020, edited by Curtis Sittenfield.

Whether probing the aches and bafflements of suburban adolescence or bringing the horrors of history to life, Scott Nadelson’s stories are always finely tuned and full of surprises. Small moments lead to big questions about what it means to be a man, an American, a Jew, or—inevitably—all of these things at once. When we say someone is One of Us, who is the “one” and who is the “us,” and what do they—what do we—owe to each other? Every story in this wise, heartfelt, moving collection addresses this complicated question, which may ultimately be unanswerable. But Nadelson has done the crucial thing, which is to ask and ask and ask.
Justin TaylorRiding with the Ghost
Striving artists. Delinquent boys. Rival neighbors. Couples who suddenly discover that “nothing as ecstatic as love’s first flare ever lasts.” In Scott Nadelson’s stories, these memorable characters either are “one of us” or outcasts trying to find their way back into the pack. Along the way they force themselves and the reader to pose the question, “Is this a world worth thriving in?” One of Us offers a rich array of surprising character-driven plots and is a perfect example of storytelling at its best.
Rita CiresiSometimes I Dream in Italian
The stories in One of Us kept knocking me off my feet and pulling me back up, drawing me in with their heart and intelligence, then flooring me with unexpected moves. They are wonderfully wide-ranging—leaping from past to present and back, as apt to gentle a figure out of history as to explode with immediacy—yet they are all linked by a clear-eyed honesty, a sense of wonder and dread, an ability to land suspense with surprising weight. These are ripping good tales by a remarkably gifted writer.
Josh WeilThe Age of Perpetual Light
Scott Nadelson deftly maps individual human hearts and lives against the broader landscapes of geography, history, religion, and class. These are rich, wise, remarkable stories that do justice to the complexities of identity and belonging.
Caitlin HorrocksThe Vexations
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Scott Nadelson

Scott Nadelson grew up in northern New Jersey before escaping to Oregon, where he has lived for the past twenty-four years. He has published four collections of short stories, The Fourth Corner of the World, named a Jewish Fiction Prize Honor Book by the Association of Jewish Libraries; Aftermath; The Cantor’s Daughter; and Saving Stanley: The Brickman Stories; and a memoir, The Next Scott Nadelson: A Life in Progress. His novel Between You and Me was published by Engine Books in 2015.

Winner of the Reform Judaism Fiction Prize, the Great Lakes Colleges Association New Writers Award, and an Oregon Book Award, Scott’s work has appeared in a variety of magazines and literary journals, including Ploughshares, The Southern Review, New England Review, Harvard Review, Glimmer Train, and Crazyhorse, and his work has been cited as distinguished in both the Best American Short Stories and Best American Essays anthologies. He teaches at Willamette University, where he is Hallie Brown Ford Chair in Writing, and in the Rainier Writing Workshop MFA Program at Pacific Lutheran University.

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Odd Ducks https://www.bkmkpress.org/fiction_titles/odd-ducks/ Tue, 30 Jun 2020 17:59:00 +0000 https://www.bkmkpress.org/?post_type=fiction_titles&p=1027 Learn more]]>
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Patricia Lawson

Patricia Lawson’s work has appeared in Pleiades, Dalhousie Review, New Letters, and elsewhere. She taught for many years at Kansas City Kansas Community College and was an associate editor of The Same. She is a Riverfront Readings committee member at the Writers Place in Kansas City and a graduate of the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Odd Ducks is her solo fiction debut.

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Postcards from the Gerund State https://www.bkmkpress.org/fiction_titles/postcards-from-the-gerund-state/ Mon, 15 Jun 2020 16:57:00 +0000 https://www.bkmkpress.org/?post_type=fiction_titles&p=900 Learn more]]>

Postcards from the Gerund State follows a group of women academics, mostly in the visual and literary arts, as they adjust to the hilarious surprises of life at Birnbrau, a fictional women’s college in Georgia with its own characteristic dysfunctions. In the culminating novella that concludes the collection, the group attend a residency at a Wyoming artist colony where for a full month, they cannot avoid or escape each other, as much as they might wish for it. Kirkus Reviews calls the book “an empathetic, often savagely comic portrait of the struggles of working women in what might be deemed an elite profession.”

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Lorraine M. López

Lorraine M. López is the Gertrude Conaway professor of English at Vanderbilt University, where she teaches in the MFA program. She is a cofounder of the Latino and Latina Studies program at Vanderbilt and an associate editor of Afro-Hispanic Review. She is also the author of six previous volumes of fiction, including Homicide Survivors Picnic (BkMk Press), finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award. Additionally, she has edited three essay collections. Her awards includes the inaugural Miguel Marmól Prize, the Paterson Prize for Young People’s Literature, the Texas Writers League Award for Outstanding Fiction, International Latino Book Award, Independent Publisher Award, Foreword Award, and Borders/Las Comadres Selections. She lives in Nashville, Tennessee.

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Stone Skimmers https://www.bkmkpress.org/fiction_titles/stone-skimmers/ Mon, 01 Jun 2020 13:20:00 +0000 https://www.bkmkpress.org/?post_type=fiction_titles&p=547 Learn more]]>

Winner of the G. S. Sharat Chandra Prize for Short Fiction, selected by Stewart O'Nan

Stone Skimmers opens in pristine, affluent Old Stonington, Connecticut, where a peculiar fifteen-year-old girl swims for hours each day across the town reservoir, lost to her own obsessions. The popular crowd spies from shore, mocking her strangeness, cozy in their camaraderie, until one betrays the group by befriending the outsider. The remaining six stories follow this splintered clique into adulthoods rife with isolation and loss, exploring the lives of those who stayed in the sheltered world of their childhoods and the challenges faced by those who chose to leave.

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Jennifer Wisner Kelly

Jennifer Wisner Kelly grew up in Connecticut, where most of the stories in Stone Skimmers are set. Her work has appeared in Poets & Writers, Greensboro Review, Massachusetts Review, and Beloit Fiction Journal. She is a graduate of Harvard, University of Chicago Law School, and Warren Wilson College's MFA program. She now lives in Concord, Massachusetts and practices law at a domestic violence advocacy nonprofit. Stone Skimmers is her debut book.

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When We Were Someone Else https://www.bkmkpress.org/fiction_titles/when-we-were-someone-else/ Sat, 30 May 2020 13:35:00 +0000 https://www.bkmkpress.org/?post_type=fiction_titles&p=1070 Learn more]]>

Winner of the G. S. Sharat Chandra Prize for Short Fiction , selected by Hilma Wolitzer

Longlisted for the Chautauqua Prize

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Rachel Groves

Rachel Groves is a graduate of Southern Methodist University and the Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA program. Her fiction has appeared in Beloit Fiction Journal, Michigan Quarterly Review, and elsewhere. When We Were Someone Else is her first book. A New Jersey native and current resident of Dallas, Texas, she has also lived in Kansas City, Missouri.

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The Owl That Carries Us Away https://www.bkmkpress.org/fiction_titles/the-owl-that-carries-us-away/ Wed, 20 May 2020 14:25:00 +0000 https://www.bkmkpress.org/?post_type=fiction_titles&p=1081 Learn more]]>

Winner of the G. S. Sharat Chandra Prize for Short Fiction, selected by Billy Lombardo

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Doug Ramspeck

Doug Ramspeck teaches at the Ohio State University at Lima. His prizes include the John Ciardi Prize for Poetry, selected by Leslie Adrienne Miller, the Barrow Street Prize, selected by Mary Ruefle, and the Michael Waters Prize from Southern Indiana Review Press. A graduate of Kenyon College and the University of California at Irvine, he lives in Lima with his wife, Beth Sutton-Ramspeck. They have a daughter, Lee, who lives in North Carolina. The Owl That Carries Us Away is his first fiction book. He is the author of five books of poetry.

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Things We Do When No One Is Watching https://www.bkmkpress.org/fiction_titles/things-we-do-when-no-one-is-watching/ Sun, 10 May 2020 16:59:00 +0000 https://www.bkmkpress.org/?post_type=fiction_titles&p=904 Learn more]]>
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Philip Gerard

Philip Gerard is the author of four novels and seven books of nonfiction, most recently The Art of Creative Research—A Field Guide for Writers and the novel The Dark of the Island. He teaches in the Department of Creative Writing at the University of North Carolina Wilmington.

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