From Publishers Weekly
This book includes 13 of the prolific Boyle's earliest stories, written when she was an American expatriate in Europe during the 1920s and '30s but long out of print. Beginning with the haunting title story, Boyle draws the reader into her characters' strange and yet uncomfortably familiar world, in which every nuance of sadness, frustration and regret is a blow that, once felt, echoes eternally. In "Life Being the Best," a compassionate teacher almost succeeds in freeing Palavicini, a motherless boy, from loneliness, but the youth's pain erupts into violence in the chilling conclusion. Above all, Boyle's intense stories are about the continual quest for love with its inevitable betrayal and loss of innocence. As Coppelia in "The Meeting of the Stones" realizes when she overhears the man she desires flirting with another man, "The words he had made a gift of to her had counterpart in other metal; he had forged their likeness from the genuine gold and spent them freely here and there." Though a few tales, such as "Winter in Italy," fail to spring to lifethe characters' sadness and missed connections are more tiresome than intriguingthis is, on the whole, a collection of provocative and impressively honest pieces. Spanier's (Kay Boyle: Artist and Activist) introduction contributes a concise, informative history and analysis of Boyle's early work. Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Life Being the Best and Other Stories FROM THE PUBLISHER
In both her art and her life, Kay Boyle has exemplified that quality she values most in other artists--the bold articulation of a passionately held belief. An American expatriate in Europe from 1923-1941, Boyle was part of that pioneering group of modernists forging the 'revolution of the word.'
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
This book includes 13 of the prolific Boyle's earliest stories, written when she was an American expatriate in Europe during the 1920s and '30s but long out of print. Beginning with the haunting title story, Boyle draws the reader into her characters' strange and yet uncomfortably familiar world, in which every nuance of sadness, frustration and regret is a blow that, once felt, echoes eternally. In ``Life Being the Best,'' a compassionate teacher almost succeeds in freeing Palavicini, a motherless boy, from loneliness, but the youth's pain erupts into violence in the chilling conclusion. Above all, Boyle's intense stories are about the continual quest for love with its inevitable betrayal and loss of innocence. As Coppelia in ``The Meeting of the Stones'' realizes when she overhears the man she desires flirting with another man, ``The words he had made a gift of to her had counterpart in other metal; he had forged their likeness from the genuine gold and spent them freely here and there.'' Though a few tales, such as ``Winter in Italy,'' fail to spring to lifethe characters' sadness and missed connections are more tiresome than intriguingthis is, on the whole, a collection of provocative and impressively honest pieces. Spanier's (Kay Boyle: Artist and Activist) introduction contributes a concise, informative history and analysis of Boyle's early work. (April)