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Fiction Short Stories (single Author)

Painting the Dog

The Best Stories of Leon Rooke

by (author) Leon Rooke

Publisher
Dundurn
Initial publish date
Mar 2014
Category
Short Stories (single author), Literary, General
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780919028449
    Publish Date
    Mar 2001
    List Price
    $26.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781459725447
    Publish Date
    Mar 2014
    List Price
    $11.99

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Description

Leon Rooke is one of Canada's preeminent fiction innovators, a master of the short form, and a literary godfather to scores of writers. Here, for the first time, is the quintessential selection of his best short fiction, culled from a prodigious career and 15 story collections.

In these beautiful affecting stories, both bittersweet and hilarious, Rooke mines the rich and often turbulent field of domestic life, of relationships between men and women, and of the fragile dislocations of young children. Included are classics such as The Birth Control King of Upper Volta, The Women's Guide to Home Companionship, and Early Obscenities in the Life of the World's Foremost Authority on Heidegger. Always fresh and original, these timeless stories push the boundaries of the traditional short story form.

Painting the Dog is vintage Rooke: 17 highly original tales brimming with whimsy and wit, pain and poignancy, and the author's endlessly astonishing and electric imagination and riotous humour.

About the author

An energetic and prolific storyteller, Leon Rooke's writing is characterized by inventive language, experimental form and an extreme range of characters with distinctive voices. He has written a number of plays for radio and stage and produced numerous collections of short stories. It is his novels, however, that have received the most critical acclaim. Fat Woman (1980) was shortlisted for the Governor General's Award and won the Paperback Novel of the Year Award. Shakespeare's Dog won the Governor General's Award in 1983. As a play, Shakespeare's Dog has toured as far afield as Barcelona and Edinburgh. A Good Baby was made into a feature film. Rooke founded the Eden Mills Writers' Festival in 1989. In 2007, Rooke was made a member of the Order of Canada. Other awards include the Canada/Australia prize, the W O Mitchell Award, the North Carolina Award for Literature and two ReLits (for short fiction and poetry). In 2012, he was the winner of the Gloria Vanderbilt Carter V Cooper Fiction Award. Recently, Rooke's works The Fall of Gravity and Shakespeare's Dog were produced in new editions for France and Italy, two countries where his work has been greatly admired.

Leon Rooke's profile page

Editorial Reviews

In the last two decades [Leon Rooke's] literally hundreds of stories have made him into one of the very few writers the rest of us have to read in order to know what the short story form can and cannot do, for he works way out there in 'terra incognita' mapping limits...He's a writer with a black belt in portraying the small daily tragedies that break bones and leave no visible wounds...he's (also) a writer with a voice so sharp and personal that he changes your life while you're busy laughing.

Russell Banks

This is the essential Rooke, a compassionate maximalist, simultaneously over the top and under control.

Montreal Gazette

At his best, Rooke taps into a supply of human gall and aspiration that is as mysterious as it is real.

National Post

Rooke...is able to capture elusive moments in time and character that reveal hidden flaws and truths.

Winnipeg Free Press

Rooke is one of the great post-Faulkner southern prose stylists...he is practically a kissing cousin to Cormac McCarthy, Carson McCullers, Flannery O'Connor...Rooke breaks the rules, makes up new rules, fractures and twists the story form with breathtaking aplomb, while communicating a generosity of spirit and 'joie de vivre' that is endlessly attractive.

Globe and Mail

Story-telling at its most compelling, a narrative to rivet a reader's attention...

Chicago Tribune

...very fine stories. What a pleasure it is that they stimulate the visual imagination as well as the intellect.

Hamilton Spectator

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