The Cuban Club: Stories
A masterpiece of mood and setting, character and remembrance, The Cuban Club is Barry Gifford's ultimate coming-of-age story told as sixty-seven linked tales, a creation myth of the Fall as seen through the eyes of an innocent boy on the cusp of becoming an innocent man. Set in Chicago in the 1950s and early 1960s against the backdrop of small-time hoodlums in the Chicago mob and the girls and women attached to them, there is the nearness of heinous crimes, and the price to be paid for them. To Roy and his friends, these twists and tragedies drift by like curious flotsam. The tales themselves are koan-like, often ending in questions, with rarely a conclusion. The story that closes the book is in the form of a letter from Roy to his father four years after his father's death, but written as if he were still alive. Indeed, throughout The Cuban Club Roy is in some doubt whether divorce or even death really exists in a world where everything seems so alive and connected.
      
Barry Gifford has been writing his Roy stories on and off for over thirty years, and earlier Roy stories have been published in Wyoming, Memories from a Sinking Ship, and The Roy Stories. But it is in The Cuban Club that he brings the form he has created in these stories to its crystallization. Indeed, to find precedents for The Cuban Club, we must look not to other story collections, but to other creation myths—to Gilgamesh, or the Old Testament, or Eduardo Galeano's Memory of Fire trilogy. Roy's age here wends back and forth between six and nineteen and back to twelve. He sees with the eyes of a seer who doesn't seem to age, and knows not to judge the good or the bad in circumstances or people, or even to question why things are as they are, instead filled with the romance of the world teetering on catastrophe always, but abounding in saving graces.
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The Cuban Club: Stories
A masterpiece of mood and setting, character and remembrance, The Cuban Club is Barry Gifford's ultimate coming-of-age story told as sixty-seven linked tales, a creation myth of the Fall as seen through the eyes of an innocent boy on the cusp of becoming an innocent man. Set in Chicago in the 1950s and early 1960s against the backdrop of small-time hoodlums in the Chicago mob and the girls and women attached to them, there is the nearness of heinous crimes, and the price to be paid for them. To Roy and his friends, these twists and tragedies drift by like curious flotsam. The tales themselves are koan-like, often ending in questions, with rarely a conclusion. The story that closes the book is in the form of a letter from Roy to his father four years after his father's death, but written as if he were still alive. Indeed, throughout The Cuban Club Roy is in some doubt whether divorce or even death really exists in a world where everything seems so alive and connected.
      
Barry Gifford has been writing his Roy stories on and off for over thirty years, and earlier Roy stories have been published in Wyoming, Memories from a Sinking Ship, and The Roy Stories. But it is in The Cuban Club that he brings the form he has created in these stories to its crystallization. Indeed, to find precedents for The Cuban Club, we must look not to other story collections, but to other creation myths—to Gilgamesh, or the Old Testament, or Eduardo Galeano's Memory of Fire trilogy. Roy's age here wends back and forth between six and nineteen and back to twelve. He sees with the eyes of a seer who doesn't seem to age, and knows not to judge the good or the bad in circumstances or people, or even to question why things are as they are, instead filled with the romance of the world teetering on catastrophe always, but abounding in saving graces.
14.95 In Stock
The Cuban Club: Stories

The Cuban Club: Stories

by Barry Gifford
The Cuban Club: Stories

The Cuban Club: Stories

by Barry Gifford

Paperback

$14.95 
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Overview

A masterpiece of mood and setting, character and remembrance, The Cuban Club is Barry Gifford's ultimate coming-of-age story told as sixty-seven linked tales, a creation myth of the Fall as seen through the eyes of an innocent boy on the cusp of becoming an innocent man. Set in Chicago in the 1950s and early 1960s against the backdrop of small-time hoodlums in the Chicago mob and the girls and women attached to them, there is the nearness of heinous crimes, and the price to be paid for them. To Roy and his friends, these twists and tragedies drift by like curious flotsam. The tales themselves are koan-like, often ending in questions, with rarely a conclusion. The story that closes the book is in the form of a letter from Roy to his father four years after his father's death, but written as if he were still alive. Indeed, throughout The Cuban Club Roy is in some doubt whether divorce or even death really exists in a world where everything seems so alive and connected.
      
Barry Gifford has been writing his Roy stories on and off for over thirty years, and earlier Roy stories have been published in Wyoming, Memories from a Sinking Ship, and The Roy Stories. But it is in The Cuban Club that he brings the form he has created in these stories to its crystallization. Indeed, to find precedents for The Cuban Club, we must look not to other story collections, but to other creation myths—to Gilgamesh, or the Old Testament, or Eduardo Galeano's Memory of Fire trilogy. Roy's age here wends back and forth between six and nineteen and back to twelve. He sees with the eyes of a seer who doesn't seem to age, and knows not to judge the good or the bad in circumstances or people, or even to question why things are as they are, instead filled with the romance of the world teetering on catastrophe always, but abounding in saving graces.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781609808600
Publisher: Seven Stories Press
Publication date: 10/08/2018
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

About The Author
BARRY GIFFORD is the author of more than forty published works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, which have been translated into thirty languages. His most recent books include The Up-Down, Writers, Sailor & Lula: The Complete Novels, Sad Stories of the Death of Kings, Imagining Paradise: New and Selected Poems, The Roy Stories, and Landscape with Traveler. Gifford lives in the San Francisco Bay Area. More at www.barrygifford.net.

Table of Contents

Roy and the River Pirates 17

Dingoes 22

The King of Vajra Dornei 25

Real Bandits 28

Haitian Fight Song (Take Two) 31

The Cuban Club 35

Appreciation 39

The Awful Country 42

Deep in the Heart 44

Unopened Letters 47

Chicago, Illinois, 1953 51

The Colony of the Sun 55

Creeps 59

Achilles and the Beautiful Land 62

Men in the Kitchen 65

Anna Louise 68

Mules in the Wilderness 71

The Boy Whose Mother May Have Married a Leopard 76

Stung 79

El almuerzo por poco 82

Vultures 86

I Also Deal in Fury 89

Hour of the Wolf 92

Lost Monkey 96

When Benny Lost his Meaning 99

Sick 105

The Sharks 109

Smart Guys 113

Apacheria 117

Dark and Black and Strange 120

The Vagaries of Incompleteness 123

King and Country 126

House of Bamboo 129

The Unexpected 133

The Way of All Flesh 136

Some Products of the Imagination 142

The Comedian 146

Lament for A Daughter of Egypt 149

The Old West 152

Incurable 154

Shrimpers 157

Learning the Game 160

The Fifth Angel 163

A Long Day's Night in the Naked City (Take Two) 166

The Religious Experience 169

The Familiar Face of Darkness 171

Las Vegas, 1949 175

In Dreams 178

Lucky 181

Danger in the Air 184

Child's Play 186

The Message 190

River Woods 193

The History and Proof of Spots on the Sun 198

War is Merely Another Kind of Writing and Language 201

The End of the Story 203

Innocent of the Blood 207

The Italian Hat 211

The Senegalese Twist 214

Kidnapped 217

The Dolphins 220

Dragonland 223

Role Model 226

Mona 229

Mud 233

The Phantom Father 236

Roy's Letter 238

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