Requiem
Author(s)
Carmody, Teresa
Contributor(s)
Ulin, David L. (other)
Language
EnglishAbstract
Requiem by Teresa Carmody is a "folk opera, a lament for the unexamined life," writes editor and author David Ulin in his Introduction. In this short collection of fiction, a lonely man plainchants for the waitress he once stalked, a sonless father serenades a fatherless son, and a bereft family gathers to bury a parent, providing an aching chorus of what is left. Carmody uses Biblical language to pierce the callous and bruised souls of these lost, and sometimes found, small-town Michiganders. In her raw spare stories, novelist, essayist, and poet Carol Muske-Dukes writes that Carmody creates in her raw, spare stories, “a voice out of the backyard burning bush, a Midwest scriptural mist: frank, fierce and fidgety, and most emphatically her own.
Keywords
loss;mourning;short stories;Midwest;family;religion;United States;MichiganDOI
10.53288/0561.1.00ISBN
9781685712068, 9781685712075Publisher
punctum booksPublisher website
https://punctumbooks.com/Publication date and place
Brooklyn, NY, 2025Imprint
Les FiguesClassification
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Narrative theme: Death, grief, loss
Short stories
United States of America, USA
Family life fiction