I Walk Between the Raindrops: Stories

I Walk Between the Raindrops: Stories

I Walk Between the Raindrops: Stories

I Walk Between the Raindrops: Stories

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Overview

An electric collection of new short stories from the inimitable, bestselling writer of*Talk to Me and*Outside Looking In

In the title story of Walk Between the Raindrops, a woman sits down next to a man at a bar and claims she has ESP. In “Thirteen Days,” passengers on a cruise line are quarantined, to horrifying and hilarious effect. And “Hyena” begins simply: “That was the day the hyena came for him, and never mind that there were no hyenas in the South of France, and especially not in Pont-Saint-Esprit-it was there and it came for him.”

A virtuoso of the short form, T.C. Boyle returns with an inventive, uproarious, and masterfully told collection of short stories characterized by biting satire, resonant wit, and a boundless, irrepressible imagination.*


Editorial Reviews

SEPTEMBER 2022 - AudioFile

This audiobook, narrated by the author and 11 others, offers a cornucopia of Boyle’s vivid imaginings. Among the many short fictions worth listening to and cogitating on, the dark fantasy “Hyena,” set in France, is delivered memorably by David de Vries, whose deliberate pace suits this horrific tale. “The Apartment,” with its sustained irony, is given just the right tone and style by the masterful Brit Derek Perkins. A more contemporary and haunting story, “The Thirteenth Day,” is narrated with thoughtful restraint and intelligence by Stephen Mendel. His cadence and tone suit the situation—a couple find themselves in Covid-19’s first days quarantined on a luxury liner off the coast of Japan. The anguished suspense is ably captured. Boyle’s poignant stories create a satisfying listening experience. A.D.M. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award, 2022 Best Audiobook © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

★ 07/18/2022

Boyle (Talk to Me) skewers American culture, masculine identity, and the modern age in his splendid latest collection. In “These Are the Circumstances,” a suburban husband kills a rattlesnake in his backyard, with disastrous results. In “The Thirteenth Day,” an outbreak of Covid-19 on a cruise ship requires all the 2,666 passengers to quarantine for 14 days after the last new case, which they fear won’t come until everyone gets it. They deal with boredom and frustration, and a marital spat prompts a woman to break protocol by leaving her “shitbird” husband in the “cage” of their cabin. The dystopian satire “SCS 750” imagines the U.S. taken over by China, the populace tightly controlled by a social credit system. Boyle’s stories are raw, unflinching, and highly entertaining, and his characters are often rude, pleasure-seeking men, as in “The Shape of a Teardrop,” in which the 31-year-old narrator lives with his parents and tends to his six fish tanks until his parents slap him with an eviction notice. No matter how unsavory the protagonists, their vulnerability eventually wins the reader’s sympathy (“Whether I was six or sixty, I was the one getting thrown out in the street,” the evicted narrator says in an internal monologue). Readers will be enthralled. Agent: Georges Borchardt, Georges Borchardt, Inc. (Sept.)

From the Publisher

The prolific Boyle continues to have fun and make literary mischief with his latest story collection. . . .There's no reason why these 13 stories should seem so funny, as most of them confront individual mortality and some sort of cultural collapse. They run the gamut from the subversively real to the surreal in such a way that they blur the distinction between the implausible and the inevitable. . . . A playful virtuoso with a deadly seriousness of purpose.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Forty-plus years into his stellar career, the prolific Boyle retains his signature charm and wit while mining the human condition for its many intrinsic foibles...Boyle’s genius lies in his ability to describe characters through the eyes of other characters, adding nuance and depth. There's a rich musicality in Boyle’s prose...His language can also take on a free flowing, jazz-like improvisational feel. Once again, Boyle’s virtuosity shines." — Booklist (starred review)

"Boyle skewers American culture, masculine identity, and the modern age in his splendid latest collection...Boyle’s stories are raw, unflinching, and highly entertaining...Readers will be enthralled." — Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"T.C. Boyle has always been a timely writer...What Boyle understands—has always understood—is that the more specific one is in a piece of writing, the more universal that piece of writing becomes...lacerating." — Alta Journal

SEPTEMBER 2022 - AudioFile

This audiobook, narrated by the author and 11 others, offers a cornucopia of Boyle’s vivid imaginings. Among the many short fictions worth listening to and cogitating on, the dark fantasy “Hyena,” set in France, is delivered memorably by David de Vries, whose deliberate pace suits this horrific tale. “The Apartment,” with its sustained irony, is given just the right tone and style by the masterful Brit Derek Perkins. A more contemporary and haunting story, “The Thirteenth Day,” is narrated with thoughtful restraint and intelligence by Stephen Mendel. His cadence and tone suit the situation—a couple find themselves in Covid-19’s first days quarantined on a luxury liner off the coast of Japan. The anguished suspense is ably captured. Boyle’s poignant stories create a satisfying listening experience. A.D.M. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award, 2022 Best Audiobook © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2022-06-08
The prolific Boyle continues to have fun and make literary mischief with his latest story collection.

There's no reason why these 13 stories should seem so funny, as most of them confront individual mortality and some sort of cultural collapse. They run the gamut from the subversively real to the surreal in such a way that they blur the distinction between the implausible and the inevitable. The epigraph quotes the promise/threat in Willie Dixon’s “I’m Your Hoochie Coochie Man”: “I’m goin’ to mess with you.” And mess with you these stories do, whether it’s removing the blinders from a series of privileged and deluded narrators or messing with the reader’s understanding of where the author might be located in this artistic dynamic. “Key to the Kingdom” invites the reader to see the protagonist as the author, though there’s always peril in doing so with this trickster. Now branded as F.X. Riley, he's returned to his alma mater—where he was known as Frank—to give a reading, and he is given something of a celebrity’s welcome. “Not that he was a celebrity himself, or not especially—books were too obscure in this age to register to that degree on the social scale, especially literary books. Like his.” It’s a story that cuts close to the bone on themes of alcoholism, paternity, and academic suicide, making a strong case that its truth has nothing to do with how factual it might be. The title story doesn’t tempt the reader to confuse author and narrator, though it rings every bit as true and is very funny in the darkest sort of way, as complacency provides little protection in the face of “something like a billion and a half stinking people all hurtling toward the grave. Like everybody else in the world. Like her. Like him.” There’s a futurism running through much of the collection, whether it’s trying to avoid omnipresent facial recognition (“SCS 750”) or submitting to the tyranny of vehicles that take you where they want you to go (“Asleep at the Wheel”), but it seems like we’ve already turned the corner into that future.

A playful virtuoso with a deadly seriousness of purpose.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176014921
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 09/13/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
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