<p>Beautifully written and fully imagined, Treadway's work reminds us that the short story form is alive and well.</p>
- <i>Chicago Tribune</i>,
<p>Most of Treadwayâs prose is clear and searingly direct. She tells her stories without flash or florid embellishments. But the little insights and illuminating details are all the more vivid in their spare dryness. Instead of telling us what the characters are feeling, she shows us.</p>
- <i>Boston Globe</i>,
<p>In almost all of these stories, characters are presented with a chance to redeem themselves; some of them seize it, some do not. . . . Treadway is at her best when she depicts characters colliding with one another in the blind clutch of life, without anyone being particularly more at fault than anotherâwhen tragedy results from circumstances of misunderstanding and human weakness. . . . Treadway succeeds brilliantly in describing the state of âgoing blank,â striking close to the core of why we donât see ourselves doing the things we do.</p>
- <i>The Rumpus</i>,
<p>Treadway writes with deep intelligence, great sensitivity, and even greater heart. These stories make a reader feel completely at home and yet continually surprised. <i>Please Come Back To Me</i> offers compelling material, delivered by an author who understands that truth is always richer when delivered with compassion.</p>
- Elizabeth Berg, author of <i>The Last Time I Saw You</i>
<p>Each of the eight stories in this collection stands on its own, but together, this assemblage of portraits of strikingly raw humans provides a depth of feeling and detail that will keep the reader captivated and longing to observe these characters for just a bit longer.</p>
- <i>Bookslut</i>,
<p>Jessica Treadway's <i>Please Come Back to Me</i> is a collection of spare and insightful stories that explore the limits of love and forgiveness. Treadway's sure and quietly penetrating style is reminiscent of Raymond Carver and Andre Dubus. Many stories focus on marriage and parenting, but there's no sentimentality here, only flashes of dark humor.</p>
- <i>Albany Times Union</i>,
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
JESSICA TREADWAY is an associate professor in the Department of Writing, Literature and Publishing at Emerson College in Boston. She is the author of Absent Without Leave and Other Stories, winner of the John C. Zacharis First Book Award, and a novel, And Give You Peace.