Friday, March 21, 2025

FFB: WITH OR WITHOUT, CHARLES DICKINSON

 

Set in family homes, factories, shops, small-town streets, backyards-the familiar landscapes of our everyday lives-these stories take us by surprise as they plumb the complex and often tenuous connections that exist between child and parent, husband and wife, friend and friend, the individual and his own thoughts:

- The unwitting jinx at a garbage collection company-accidents happen around him, not to him-avoids becoming the company pariah when he’s shown a way to make his “powers” work to everyone’s advantage…

- A man taught by his father’s example to disdain work, and who married into a family obsessed with it (his sever brothers-in-law, carpenters, built his house while he passed out the beers), may have found his calling at last-in sophisticated self-amusement…

- On a picket line-across months of long, cold nights-a man and a woman are drawn together by a shared desperate optimism and by the scent of the woman’s perfume…

- The game of Risk played habitually-obsessively-by a group of friends becomes a strangely unsettling reflection of their own tangled lives…

- Facing a middle age and a growing sense of emptiness, a man convinces himself that his dead friend-whose life he always envied, whose approval would validate his own life-has never died…

- When his teacher, and then his parents, dub him a “goof,” a young boy hesitantly unveils graphic proof that he’s already mastered his father’s dream of being an artist…

In each of the ten stories, Charles Dickinson puts a spin on the ordinary. It is the pleasure of these stories that they enable us to see what would perhaps otherwise remain hidden: humor in the most mundane situation, eloquence in a simple human gesture, the quirky, telling, sometimes ennobling moments in the day-to-dayness of life.

 

I read this collection in March of 1988. The description here is from Barnes and Noble website. I thought very highly of this book,  but the subject matter of short stories is hard to recall.  Dickinson has also written several well thought of novels, and I especially remember THE WIDOW'S ADVENTURE. 


5 comments:

Margot Kinberg said...

It sounds like such an interesting collection, Patti, and I do like that it's about ordinary, everyday people. It's not easy to do that well.

pattinase (abbott) said...

That is my favorite sort of story, Margot.

Jeff Meyerson said...

This sounds really good. I don't know him at all but will look for it.

Jeff Meyerson said...

Update:

The Brooklyn Public Library has two of his novels, that's it.

The Palm Beach County Library has nothing by Dickinson.

But when I went to the Cloud Library, they had a number of his books, including this one, which they say will be available in 10 days. I put it on hold.

Diane Kelley said...

I've read a couple of Charles Dickinson books over the years, but not this one. I'll track it down.