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Francis Ford Coppola's Zoetrope: All-Story

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A second collection of great writing that integrates the worlds of film and fiction incorporates original essays and features stories by Jennifer Egan, Pinckney Benedict, Peter Greenaway, Rick Moody, Francine Prose, Rick Bass, and TourT, among other notable authors. all selected from the pages of the literary journal Zoetrope. Original. 25,000 first printing.

320 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2001

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About the author

Adrienne Brodeur

7 books761 followers
Adrienne Brodeur is the author of the novel "Little Monsters," a New York Times Editor's Choice and a Vogue Best Book of 2023, and the memoir “Wild Game,” which was a Best Book of the Year by Amazon, NPR, People, and the Washington Post. Both "Little Monster" and "Wild Game" are in development as films. She founded the literary magazine, “Zoetrope: All-Story” with filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola, was an acquiring editor at HMH Books, and served as a judge for the National Book Award. Her essays have appeared in Glamour, O Magazine, The National, The New York Times, Vogue, and other publications. She is the Executive Director of the literary nonprofit, Aspen Words

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5 stars
20 (26%)
4 stars
33 (44%)
3 stars
15 (20%)
2 stars
6 (8%)
1 star
1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Tait.
Author 5 books62 followers
July 29, 2009
I haven't read any of the other issues of Zoetrope to compare this one to, but if the magazine is an indication of the kind of writing coming out of contemporary Latin American countries than I am highly excited, and look forward to some of these authors eventually putting out books. While a few times the writing fell into that meta-abstracted Borges-influenced style, these stories show a sense of reality and language that relies more on writers like Bolano or some of Cortazar's more literal writings, though I'm sure the authors here have a much broader range of local inspirations that I as a North American have been able to be exposed to.

Of particular note was the last story in the collection, "Tuesday Meetings" by Slavko Zupcic from Venezuela; about the meetings of a psych ward, told from the point of view of a schizophrenic recording the meetings and his intimate thoughts as a newspaper for the rest of the ward to read, all building up a visit from the Pope, a story that works, despite the challenges of writing insane narrators.

All the stories in this collection are in translation, but the original Spanish editions are included in the back. The issue also contains illustrations from famed director Guillermo del Toro, which sounds exciting, except that the drawings are all grotesque juvenilia that he admits in the introduction are toss-offs, and I felt had no relation to the content or tone of the stories (hence the four stars).
Profile Image for Kristi.
491 reviews
February 6, 2020
In fairness, when I bought this book (zoetrope whatever), it was in a plastic sleeve at Francis Ford Coppola’s winery after I drank a few glasses of good wine. I thought I was buying a short novela written buy FFC and illustrated by Guillermo Del Toro. I was excited for my purchase.

Two years later, I open it up to find it’s short stories by several Latino authors. But I realized last year that I don’t like short story compilations books. It’s usually too short of story with no ending and a confusing plot. I was still hopeful.

Until I opened it and started to read the first story. Only, now I have really weird illustrations that only half the time made sense. I did like Insular Menu, Fantasy, and Tuesday Meetings. The others were maybe lost in translation and not good. One of them, I think it missed sentences (the one about the conductor's daughter with that damn chicken), because the short story was so choppy like an off off and even offer broadway play. And the one about the brothers was just one giant run on sentence. I couldn't keep track of it.

Never again will I purchase another short story compilation book. If it has a plastic sleeve on it and I can't open before buying, then I will not buy it. Lesson officially learned.
Profile Image for Silvia G..
37 reviews21 followers
January 6, 2019
Dall'omonima rivista fondata da Francis Ford Coppola, un' antologia di dodici (bei) racconti, un libro da leggere, se volete aggiornarvi sullo stato della short-story negli USA. Personalmente, finora ho trovato i racconti ottimi, il mio preferito rimane per ora La moglie del pasticciere di certa Sara Powers, che apre la raccolta. I temi e le tecniche sono varie; nota comune, mi sembra, una certa impronta visuale, molto americana e molto cinematografica. Da non perdere.

Piccola classifica personale:


La moglie del pasticciere

La sua nuova vita

Quando Dio affonda il suo amore nel mio cuore

Diario rosso con spirali

Northwood

Crimini di guerra

Manuale di caccia e pesca per ragazze

Erotomorfismo

Con una X

Ultima offerta

Hiropon, la mia eroina

Gamberge & Silky
Profile Image for Sarah.
Author 116 books957 followers
October 26, 2009
Do you remember "The Emperor's New Clothes"? I've read anthologies in the past in which the stories seem to be hand-picked for their inaccessibility. It seems as if the editor has held each complicated piece of prose up to the light and said "I can't understand this! Therefore tt must be brilliant!"

These are good stories. Solid stories. None of them were transcendent, but most were accessible and readable and engaging.

I particularly liked Steve Almond's "The Evil BB Chow", Margo Rabb's "How To Tell A Story", and Karen E. Bender's "Anything for Money", and Alicia Erian's "You" despite the ick factor.
Profile Image for A-ron.
191 reviews
May 15, 2015
There were no real duds here, but there were a few storied I didn't like. Such is the risk of story compilations. Some highlights were:

"You" by Alicia Erian, "The Evil B.B. Chow" by Steve Almond, "Zog 19: A Scientific Romance by Pinckney Benedict (though he must secretly be Kurt Vonnegut), "Ogallala" by Rick Bass (It was a grower), and "Goodbye My Love" by Jennifer Egan.

There was enough working in this collection that I'll probably check out some issues of Zoetrope in the future.
Profile Image for Blanca.
172 reviews27 followers
May 5, 2007
Whether you call it short stories or short fiction, it is fantastic and I would encourage a subscription to the monthly publication of the same name. I love the New Yorker, but this is strictly quality, grade-A fiction.
Profile Image for Lee Harrington.
Author 4 books21 followers
May 19, 2013
Hands-down the best literary magazine out there. Yes, I am biased, having worked there, but the quality of fiction and art and non-fiction in Zoetrope is outstanding.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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