The wonder garden

by Lauren Acampora

Paper Book, 2015

Status

Available

Publication

New York : Grove Press, c2015.

Description

Fiction. Literature. Short Stories. HTML:"In 13 sharply drawn linked stories, Acampora reveals the complexities beneath the polish and privilege of a prosperous Connecticut town."â??People A man strikes an under-the-table deal with a surgeon to spend a few quiet seconds closer to his wife than he's ever been; a young soon-to-be mother looks on in paralyzing astonishment as her husband walks away from a twenty-year career in advertising at the urging of his spirit animal; an elderly artist risks more than he knows when he's commissioned by his newly-arrived neighbors to produce the work of a lifetime. In her stunning debut collection, The Wonder Garden, Lauren Acampora brings to the page with enchanting realism the myriad lives of a suburban town and lays them bare. These linked stories take a trenchant look at the flawed people of Old Cranbury, incisive tales that reveal at each turn the unseen battles we play out behind drawn blinds, the creeping truths from which we distract ourselves, and the massive dreams we haul quietly with us and hold close. Deliciously creepy and masterfully complex The Wonder Garden heralds the arrival of a phenomenal new talent in American fiction. "Like Wharton, Acampora seems to understand fiction as a kind of elegant design."â??The New York Times Book Review "Acampora is a brilliant anthropologist of the suburbs . . . [The Wonder Garden] is reminiscent of John Cheever in its anatomizing of suburban ennui and of Ann Beattie in its bemused dissection of a colorful cast of eccentrics."â??Boston Globe "Intelligent, unnerving, and very often strange . . . as irresistible as it is disturbing."â??Publishers Weekly (star… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member knitwit2
Each chapter details the particular neurosis of a particular person or family in the same Connecticut town. The stories intersect in interesting ways and leaves the reader with the feeling that Connecticut is best avoided.
LibraryThing member Beamis12
What a wonderful collection of connected stories. As a child in Chicago, I remember walking past houses on my block, and making up stories with my friends about what was happening in those houses. This is what these stories are, a personal glimpse behind doors of the people who live on Old Cranbury
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road. So very interesting because some of the characters,receive multiple points of view, so in some of the stories we see what people think of a certain family and then we are treated to a glimpse of what the actual family is like, by the family themselves. Absolutely brilliant. Plus I liked every story which is always a big plus.
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LibraryThing member jphamilton
After reading all the praise, I had to try this collection of short stories for myself. My high praise shows up as this crow. Several reviewers compared her writings to John Cheever, which I can see because of the constant suburban setting, but she has some very unique, sometimes unsettling, plot
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twists of her very own. The stories are interrelated, with some characters showing up, or mentioned, in many of the stories. At times, the previously mentioned characters are scampering around on the edges of another story, and other times they're upfront and face-on.
This is an upscale suburbia, but different, and more contemporary, than the meetings over the ever-presnt cocktails of Cheever's stories. I am still thinking — and a little haunted — by the man who bribes a surgeon to be allowed into the operating theater during his wife's brain surgery, and allowed to reach out and actually touch her exposed brain.
There's a lot of stress in these wealthy homes, and it was interesting to read about how the author enjoys driving around her very own neighborhood in Westchester County, New York, imaging what lurks within the restored and sometimes McMansioned homes.
I found these stories very good, very clever, and I'm glad that I made that suburban trip again.
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