After the Gazebo
by Jen Knox
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Pub Date May 31 2015 | Archive Date Aug 13 2020
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Description
The perfect pitch, the flawless diction, and the aura of calm are all grace notes with which Jen Knox cloaks the troubled waters of the human heart.
A Knox tale begins in a recognizable place, but in every one of these brilliant stories, she confounds the readers expectations and ends them in eerily beautiful, untrod territory. The stories in After the Gazebo seduce yet refuse what is coarse; they disdain the slipknot of the obscene, and still they electrify. Exquisite and edgy, they quietly shock. The reader bestows a rock solid trust in this narrators voice and is willing to linger with the energy drinks and flat-screen TVs, the 12 Steps, the cubicles and performance reviews, the bus rides and DMVs eye tests.
This author does not hide behind the exotic but with great skill and generosity braves the commonplace. These stories go fathoms deep all the way to the shivery core, where the familiar heightens into the sublime, and then into the dazzling. The perceptible world has been sorely neglected in fiction, perhaps waiting for a writer with the craft and courage to take it on. Jen Knox is that writer. After the Gazebo is that book.
Advance Praise
"Complex, assured stories that describe the complications of love and need with perfect pitch. --Kirkus Reviews
With a clear lens pressed to her creative eye, Jen Knox has crafted a diverse collection of stories where loss, hardships, and tender vulnerabilities are stretched across the uncertain horizon of everyday life. --Beth Hoffman, internationally bestselling author of Looking for Me"
Available Editions
ISBN | 9781495106125 |
PRICE | $6.95 (USD) |
Links
Featured Reviews
After the Gazebo is a collection of short stories by Jen Knox. They flow together so well I thought at first they were all part of the same story. They deal with the human heart and relationships. One of the stories I really like is "The Snowstorm" which is a man against nature story in this case a bad storm what I guess would be a blizzard. But it's more than that; it's also about the relationship dynamics people go through in a crisis situation like this. Another story I enjoyed was "Scratching Silver" though when it first began I didn't think I would. It's a story about a man coming back after many years to see his child whom he has never seen before. There were only two stories I didn't really care for. I really enjoy Knox's writing style, and though this is the first book I've read by her, I will definitely read more. It's easy to see why she has won so many awards for her writing. Thank you for Jen Knox, Rain Mountain Press, and Net Galley for giving me the opportunity to read this book! Check it out for an entertaining read!
Lovely, lovely short stories - some so short that they are more vignettes than short stories. They feel real and the characters despite (or thanks to) their flaws feel close. It's easy to feel empathy for them; and the writing - clean, precise, poetic but nearly clinical in some stories - was really pleasant to read. Some stories were better than others, but I liked finding characters from one in another. They feel like something someone would tell you in a coffee shop, something heard from a friend of a friend.
The stories in Jen Knox's After the Gazebo are eclectic, but unified in tone. They are stories of people who have been beaten up by a hard world, but have been left with a sense of hope. Sometimes the characters make bad decisions, but often these are tales of circumstances that build up and overwhelm. The subjects include topics such as substance abuse, the problems of aging, abusive relationships, raging storms, car accidents, and so many others. But the writing is character oriented with the focus not on what happens as much as it is on how it impacts the people.
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