The Dead Fish Museum: Stories
by Charles D'Ambrosio
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 324)
Read in October, 2007
Depressingly well written. No idea why I bother to write myself with a book like this out there. Okay, enough whining, back to praise: I loved the effortless language, the awe-inspiring brilliance of choosing exactly the right word, again and again. On a stylistic level, reading these stories is physically pleasant.
On the level of content, I read the stories as character studies rather than plot/arc/resolution stories. The story is always about someone's soul, the messy, organic conflict at ...more
On the level of content, I read the stories as character studies rather than plot/arc/resolution stories. The story is always about someone's soul, the messy, organic conflict at ...more
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
fans of Raymond Carver
I picked this up from the library due to the long litany of writers whose works I admire (Michael Chabon among them) making very vocal recommendations for this young man being the best new writer to emerge in quite some time. For that reason, I am a bit surprised at how underwhelmed I was by this collection of short stories. The stories all struck me as being wonderful middles to stories that had beginnings and ends that we, as readers, were not made privy to. They're thought-provoking slices of...more
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Read in July, 2007
I read 'High Divide' and 'Drummond & Son'. These two stores are about a father's relationship to his son. 'High Divide' is about a father and son who takes a camping trip to Olympia Washington. The hike culminate in one night when at the very peak of the mountain, the father asked his son to move to California after the divorce. Indeed the title suggest that there is going to be a divide. It is also a fork in the road which hikers often confront. Midway, there's a sign post which ask l...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommended to C(h)ristine by:
Krystn
A friend of mine raved about this collection. She absolutely RAVED about it–to the point where I became rather suspicious. Could it be THAT good? She kept telling me to read it.
So of course, in my stubborn way, I decided to NOT read it right away. I mean, no one tells me what to do and what to like!
But I finally did pick up the book, a year later. And fell in love with the stories and D’Ambrosio’s writing. These are complex, complete stories–the characters so intricate, the ...more
So of course, in my stubborn way, I decided to NOT read it right away. I mean, no one tells me what to do and what to like!
But I finally did pick up the book, a year later. And fell in love with the stories and D’Ambrosio’s writing. These are complex, complete stories–the characters so intricate, the ...more
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bookshelves:
shortfiction
Read in March, 2007
recommends it for:
short story fans, humans
D'Ambrosio is really doing fine work in this collection. While nothing's quite as good as the opener "The High Divide", which was featured in the 2006 O'Henry stories, both "Up North" and "The Screenwriter" demonstrate his versatility with wildly different types of story; the first is an extremely coldly-drawn bit of naturalism about a husband obsessing over his wife's adolescent rape while hunting with her father, the latter a creepy, surrealistic story about a s...more
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Read in December, 2007
A wonderful collection of short stories that evoke emotions as rich and different as the worlds represented -- from Kalona, Iowa to New York City and Seattle.
My favorite passage, from the story "Blessing":
"My ideal life is a quiet one. I like to read, to sit still in the same chair, with the lampshade at a certain angle, alone, or with Megan nearby, and now an then, if I'm lucky, I'll come across a lovely phrase or fine sentiment, look up from my book, and feel the harmon...more
My favorite passage, from the story "Blessing":
"My ideal life is a quiet one. I like to read, to sit still in the same chair, with the lampshade at a certain angle, alone, or with Megan nearby, and now an then, if I'm lucky, I'll come across a lovely phrase or fine sentiment, look up from my book, and feel the harmon...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
people who normally dislike short stories
You know when you are eating or drinking something that borderlines on transcendence? Eating a whole truffle or a block of nearly 100% dark chocolate? Slurping Blue Point oysters and guzzling Veuve? Yeah. That's this book. I kept telling myself to slow down, but moderation has never been my forte. And now it's done, and I feel the need to go back and read each story again and again until they are burned into my mind. Each of these short stories are literary stars, full of characters with ...more
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Read in December, 2006
recommends it for:
lovers of short stories
Someone recently told me that, for all it's beauty, she couldn't get through the The Dead Fish Museum because it was too depressing. All due respect, this person was not reading. She was simply taking the D'Ambrosio world at face-value – mental hospitals and recovery wards, failing businesses, porno sets – a world which, on the surface, appears to resemble that of William Vollman. But in comparison, Vollman buckles. His bleakness is a fey spectacle which bullies its readers into a pre-...more
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bookshelves:
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i-want-to-write-like-this,
my-professors,
short-stories
Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
Contemporary readers who appreciate high diction and wordplay.
The Dead Fish Museum takes the reader through a series of very realistic, no-bullshit stories. Charles D'Ambrosio is very particular about which words he puts where, making sentence after sentence a literary success unto itself. Each story is flawless; not just that but good. Good to read. Good to think about. One of the best books I have read by any of my professors yet...more
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
the cold, warm, and still-beating
I really dig these stories!
I mean, if I weren't otherwise involved, I'd probably make out with this book.
In all seriousness, how can you not love a writer who uses 'recalcitrant' in a not-annoying way?
I like D'Ambrosio's brand of nostalgic, subtle prose. 'Up North' and 'Drummond & Son' are stand-outs; look for the descriptions of the bat-like umbrella in the latter. Characters are painted as haunting apparitions of day and night, e.g. the title story's seedy hotel clerk: "H...more
I mean, if I weren't otherwise involved, I'd probably make out with this book.
In all seriousness, how can you not love a writer who uses 'recalcitrant' in a not-annoying way?
I like D'Ambrosio's brand of nostalgic, subtle prose. 'Up North' and 'Drummond & Son' are stand-outs; look for the descriptions of the bat-like umbrella in the latter. Characters are painted as haunting apparitions of day and night, e.g. the title story's seedy hotel clerk: "H...more
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These stories are just so well-made in every traditional measure: character, setting, scene and plot. He's not doing anything experimental here, just working the vein of realist fiction -- with an occasional dash of magic -- and creating the payoff for the reader of experiencing a richly felt world through language. His subjects are familiar and often fall into the Hemingway vein of manly endeavor -- hunting, nature, etc. -- but each piece simply feels substantial, as though D'Ambrosio goes one ...more
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Read in July, 2007
Two pages into the title story I was awed and ready to fall in love with this whole collection, and then...it didn't quite happen.
Dark, distantly mystical stories about porn carpenters and floods on the Skagit river that are cryptic as hell and set in places I've lived...what's not to like? But I guess for all their promise these stories were more admirable than affecting -- they gave the feeling of "damn, wouldn't THAT be fun to puzzle over in a sterile academic environment" ra...more
Dark, distantly mystical stories about porn carpenters and floods on the Skagit river that are cryptic as hell and set in places I've lived...what's not to like? But I guess for all their promise these stories were more admirable than affecting -- they gave the feeling of "damn, wouldn't THAT be fun to puzzle over in a sterile academic environment" ra...more
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Found somewhere between Flannery O'Connor, Alistair MacLeod, John Steinbeck--incredibly powerful and still writing. His stories drift lightly, characters wafting, and then at the end, in the last two paragraphs, in the last paragraph, fall like lead, crater in the ground. Great stuff.
If nothing else, sit in a bookstore for twenty minutes and read the first story, "The High Divide."
If nothing else, sit in a bookstore for twenty minutes and read the first story, "The High Divide."
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Read in February, 2007
recommends it for:
fans of "classic" short stories.
Despite what the title might connote, the stories in the Fish Museum are pretty straight forward in both style and realism. They are, however, fantastic. Unlike most practitioners of this kind of short fiction, Ambrosio allows his stories to be messy and chaotic instead of neat little structures with cute epiphanies tagged to the end. A lot of darkness here. I dig it.
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Read in October, 2007
I wasn't sure about this collection after I read the first story. It fell flat for me. But I kept at it and liked the majority of stories here. These are character studies about people in desparate circumstances. Stories I liked include: Drummond and Son (heartbreaking), Up North, The Scheme of Things, Blessing, and The Bone Game.
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Read in May, 2008
From cover: Taking place in remote cabins, asylum,s Indian reservations, the backroads of Iowa and the streets of Seattle, this collection of stories, as muscular and challenging as the best novels, is about people who have been orphaned, who have lost connection, and who have exhausted the ability to generate meaning in their lives.
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Read in May, 2007
charlie d'ambrosio is one of my favorite short story writers writing today. his other books (including his book of nonfictional essays) are all great. his writing is tight, his dialogue is stellar, and he's got a wry sense of humor and a knack for the absurd. from this newer collection, read the short story "screenwriter."
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must-reads
Read in September, 2006
recommends it for:
everyone!
I love Charles D'Ambrosio. I think he's a genius. I just love his writing--it's a bit depressing--ok, very much so; but his characters and the brief glimpses we get of their lives and his poetry is beautiful. I have a bit of an intellectual crush on him--I'll admit--but read his book and I think you might too.
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Read in December, 2007
I really admired the stories in this book. They are veyr powerful in the northwestern-outdoorsy-macho tradition. I normally have a pet peeve about stories set in mental institutions (since I prefer reality set in mental institutions) but I make an exception for the wonderful story "Screenwriter."
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Read in November, 2007
It’s amazing how quickly the characters come to life, fleshed out so painfully real in no time. Richly crafted settings blend in balance with layered human drama. These addicting and enjoyable stories search for the elusive pathways to a redemption that may or may not exist.
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