From
the Place in the Valley Deep in the Forest
Mitch Cullin
 An
astronomer grieving over the death of his wife; an Asian-American medic
bicycling through the countryside where she once held dying soldiers;
the words of a Beatles song sung in a Cambodian work camp; a young
rock-a-billy aficionado slicking back his hair in a Ukrainian village;
a group of housewives smoking cigars and playing cards while a tornado
approaches their west Texas town; and a Native American castaway carving
faces on treesthe stories and characters in this diverse collection
of stories from the acclaimed novelist Mitch Cullin provide a fascinating
gloss on events that have taken place in the second half of the 20th century.
They begin at a remote Japanese beach house and end on an unnamed Alaskan
island. These are stories about isolation, remembrances of past experiences,
and the sometimes inaccurate nature of memory. Cullins stories examine
individuals who have survived momentous, often horrific, social upheavalswhere
relationships and common day-to-day life are suddenly shaken by unforeseen
circumstances.
From
the Place in the Valley Deep in the Forest is a collection that deftly
suggests we are all emigrants from personal histories we recall only fleetinglymoments
which draw us back, but, as we imagine them, seem increasingly difficult
to grasp. These polished and graceful stories are further evidence of
the kind of work that makes Cullin one of our best, young writers. Mitch
Cullin has written four novels: Whompyjawed, Branches, Tideland,
and Cosmology of Bing. This is his first book of short stories.
He lives in Tucson, Arizona.
2001, 5½ x 8½, 244 pages
ISBN 0-8023-1336-1 Paper $14.95
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