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Florida

Groff, Lauren. (Author). Cloud. (Added Author).

-- New York Times "Restorative fiction for these urgent times." ( -- The New Yorker "Easily the year's best story collection." ( -- Florida is a magnificent achievement.

E-book  - 2018
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  • ISBN: 9780698405141
  • Physical Description 1 online resource 288 pages
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : Penguin Publishing Group, 2018.

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Electronic book.
GMD: electronic resource.
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Electronic reproduction. [S.l.] Penguin Publishing Group 2018 Available via World Wide Web.
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Format: Adobe EPUB
Requires: cloudLibrary (file size: 1.4 MB)

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Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 9780698405141
Florida
Florida
by Groff, Lauren
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Library Journal Review

Florida

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

A frank, rambunctious, generous writer, Groff thought big in her much-heralded novel Fates and Furies. Here, in spot-on language, she effectively provides slice-of-life reading, capturing the scents and sounds of her newly adopted state, Florida. Her portraits aren't of sand, surf, and sunshine; instead, she shows us houses that "rot and droop" in the humidity, the "devilish reek of snakes" at swamp's edge, and an "old hunting camp shipwrecked in twenty miles of scrub" where a panther lurks. But these portraits aren't unaffectionate, and the characters can be satisfyingly tough, though Groff's alter ego in several stories is still getting her bearings. In the opening story, she walks nightly in her transitional neighborhood, seeing few people but keeping herself from becoming a yowling mom. The standout "At the Round Earth's Imagined Corners" traces a Florida boy's life from his rough upbringing, his mother's stealing him away to safety, his father's grabbing him back, and his adulthood in the family home, when he confronts the ghost of his let-down father, then joyously greets his wife. VERDICT Well-observed, unexpected writing for fans and more. [See Prepub Alert, 12/11/17.] © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - New York Times Review for ISBN Number 9780698405141
Florida
Florida
by Groff, Lauren
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New York Times Review

Florida

New York Times


August 30, 2019

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company

FLORIDA, by Lauren Groff. (Riverhead, $16.) Groff, the author of "Fates and Furies," is a master storyteller, and the 11 stories in her new collection dive into darker sides of the titular state: Panthers, tropical storms and sinkholes - not to mention plenty of bad men - abound. But it's not all grim: As our reviewer, Christine Schutt, put it, the selections "lean toward love and the promise of good people, in not just this state but the world." ROBIN, by Dave Itzkoff. (Picador, $18.) Itzkoff, a culture reporter for The Times, has written an appreciative and extensively reported biography of his hero Robin Williams. He follows Williams's development, from a wealthy, introverted teenager to a brilliant comic phenomenon, but doesn't skirt the comedian's personal struggles, including addiction and mental illness. WE BEGIN OUR ASCENT, by Joe Mungo Reed. (Simon & Schuster, $16.) A debut novel focuses on cycling, performance drugs and the personal failings of Sol, a middling British racer on the Tour de France. The book also includes a look at his marriage, to a geneticist waiting for a breakthrough. As Sol keeps doping, he and his wife are drawn into a drug-smuggling operation, raising questions about the moral consequences of ambition. INTO THE RAGING SEA: Thirty-Three Mariners, One Megastorm, and the Sinking of El Faro, by Rachel Slade. (Ecco/HarperCollins, $17.99.) In 2015, the 790-foot ship El Faro sank off the Bahamas during Hurricane Joaquin, becoming the worst American maritime disaster in decades. Slade makes good use of the transcript captured by the voyage data recorder, offering heartbreaking insight into the ship's final hours. Our reviewer, Douglas Preston, called the book "a powerful and affecting story, beautifully handled." MY EX-LIFE, by Stephen McCauley. (Flatiron, $16.99.) When readers meet David Hedges, this novel's central character, it's not his happiest time: His boyfriend has left him, his job is unfulfilling and the house he rents (and loves) is being sold. But a phone call from his ex-wife, Julie, changes everything. Soon, he's heading to Boston to help her daughter sort out her life plans, and he and Julie become unlikely companions. RAGE BECOMES HER: The Power of Women's Anger, by Soraya Chemaly. (Atria, $17.) A longtime activist, Chemaly outlines a number of inequities that should outrage women (pay disparity, discrimination, harassment). Despite the socialization that women and girls receive to suppress their emotions, she makes a case for how anger can be a galvanizing force.

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9780698405141
Florida
Florida
by Groff, Lauren
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Publishers Weekly Review

Florida

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Ferocious weather and self-destructive impulses plague the characters in this assured collection, the first from Groff (Fates and Furies) since 2009's Delicate Edible Birds. In "Above and Below," a grad student loses her university funding and spirals into homelessness. The solo vacationer in "Salvador"-one of three stories set outside Florida-waits out a raging storm with a menacing shopkeeper who, after the harrowing night, "smelled of wet denim and sweated-out alcohol and sour private skin." Groff's descriptions shimmer with precision: in "Eyewall," at the onset of a hurricane that a hallucinating woman endures alone, "the lake goosebumped" and "the house sucked in a shuddery breath." On a family getaway to a cheerless cabin in the claustrophobic "The Midnight Zone," a woman notes "how the screens at night pulsed with the tender bellies of lizards." That story is one of five to feature an unnamed fretful mother and novelist who, in "Yport," has dragged her two young sons to France while she researches Guy de Maupassant. "Their world is so full of beauty," she says, fearing for the boys' future, "the last terrible flash of beauty before the darkness." A number of the stories hit similar tonal notes (pessimism threatens to sink a few of them), but Groff's skillful prose, self-awareness, and dark humor leaven the bleakness, making this a consistently rewarding collection. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9780698405141
Florida
Florida
by Groff, Lauren
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Kirkus Review

Florida

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

In 11 electric short stories, the gifted Groff (Fates and Furies, 2015, etc.) unpacks the "dread and heat" of her home state.In her first fiction since President Barack Obama named Fates and Furies his favorite book of the year, Groff collects her singing, stinging stories of foreboding and strangeness in the Sunshine State. Groff lives in Gainesville with a husband and two sons, and four of these tales are told from the perspectives of unmoored married mothers of young ones. The first, "Ghosts and Empties," which appeared in the New Yorker, begins with the line, "I have somehow become a woman who yells," a disposition the narrator tries to quell by walking at all hours as "the neighbors' lives reveal themselves, the lit windows domestic aquariums." Groff fans will recognize the descriptive zest instantly. The same quasi-hapless mother seems to narrate "The Midnight Zone," in which she imperils the lives of her boys by falling off a stool and hitting her head while alone with them at a remote cabin, "where one thing [she] liked was how the screens at night pulsed with the tender bellies of lizards." Ditto for the lonely oddballs telling "Flower Hunters" and "Yport," the longest and last story, in which the reckless mother is often coated in alcohol. These are raw, danger-riddled, linguistically potent pieces. They unsettle their readers at every pass. In the dreamy, terrific "Dogs Go Wolf," two little girls are abandoned on an island, their starvation lyrical: "The older sister's body was made of air. She was a balloon, skidding over the ground"; their rescue is akin to a fairy tale. Equally mesmerizing is "Above and Below," in which the graduate student narrator sinks away and dissipates into vivid, exacting homelessness. Even the few stories that dribble off rather than end, such as "For the God of Love, For the Love of God," have passages of surpassing beauty. And Groff gets the humid, pervasive white racism that isn't her point but curdles through plenty of her characters.A literary tour de force of precariousness set in a blistering place, a state shaped like a gun. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 9780698405141
Florida
Florida
by Groff, Lauren
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BookList Review

Florida

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

The flora and fauna of the Sunshine State vine and prowl through Groff's second short story collection and first book since the smash-hit novel Fates and Furies (2015). With sympathy for her characters and a keen sensitivity to the natural world, Groff gets readers wondering who or what will triumph or succumb. Contrary to all good advice, a woman waits out a hurricane in her historic home and is visited by the ghosts of men she's loved. A writer, the mother of two young sons, appears in several stories. In one, she's alone with the boys in a remote cabin when she falls while changing a lightbulb and then battles to remain calm and awake in a concussed delirium. In Yport, the three spend a summer month in France for the woman's research on Guy de Maupassant, and it will be the boys who teach her something she hadn't realized about the writer she'd long studied. Though 10 of the 11 stories have been previously published, their power as a single unit is undeniable.--Bostrom, Annie Copyright 2018 Booklist