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The Night in Question

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A story of siblings and faith from short-story master Tobias Wolff

Frances has always been protective of her younger brother Frank. The children of a brutal father and a sick, defenseless mother, Frances fought to keep her brother safe. And throughout all of his adult failings—from drug addiction to near-fatal car crashes—she has stood by his side.

Now Frank has found religion. Standing in his crisp white shirt and restrictive tie, he's eager to recount last Sunday's sermon to his older sister. As the sermon unfolds, the father must make a terrible choice—one that cuts deep for Frances. Can she and her brother withstand these new challenges?

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Tobias Wolff's short stories range in location and lives but always transmit an inventive power. These stories are fine examples of emotional color. The narration by the author is good; he's articulate, and his tone is clear and appealing. However, he's not dramatically trained in delivery, and each phrase has much the same emphasis. The vocal cues that actors use to help listeners glean what's important and what's not are missing. The stories themselves have strong dramatic and emotional impact, and Wolff's narration maintains a certain neutrality. Listeners who appreciate an unobtrusive style will like Wolff's reading. This reviewer would like to hear a more expressive rendition. R.F.W. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 29, 1997
      These 15 stories by the PEN/Faulkner-award winner strike a uniquely American psychic note, said PW.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from October 2, 1996
      While some gifted writers make a show of their virtuosity, others, like Wolff, make what they do seem so artless that only upon reflection is the meticulous craftsmanship and intelligence of their work apparent. Wolff's first book of short fiction in over a decade (after his two acclaimed memoirs, This Boy's Life and In Pharaoh's Army) finds him writing at the top of the form. In each of the 14 stories in this splendid collection, Wolff's tone is unadorned, and a good number of the events he describes are just this side of prosaic; yet they are graced by an unerring sense of just how much depth can be mined from even a seemingly inconsequential situation. In "Firelight," an unnamed narrator recollects looking at rental apartments with his glamorous but impoverished mother; their brief interaction with another family showing them an apartment they can't possibly afford opens up into a meditation on home, family and belonging. The book begins with the wry and surprising "Mortals," in which a journalist is fired for writing the obituary of a man who proves to be very much alive. Other strong stories include "Flyboys," about an uneasy trio of youthful friends, and "The Chain," in which a man's desire for revenge after his daughter is attacked by a dog begets a cycle of violence with unforeseen consequences. In several stories, teenage protagonists and young men serving in Vietnam suddenly experience the instinct of self preservation; they and other characters learn to test the limits of their moral certitude. Wolff's characterizations are impeccable, his ear pitch-perfect and his eye unblinking yet compassionate. 30,000 first printing.

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  • English

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