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  • Published: 20 May 2008
  • ISBN: 9780345494702
  • Imprint: Random House US Group
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 240
  • RRP: $29.99

The Difference Between Women and Men

Stories




Short stories by a writer who recently compkete a term of the most influential jobs in the short fiction arena in this country, the Southern Review. The stylistic range here will surprise many readers familiar with his other work.

In this deeply affecting, beautifully crafted collection of short fiction, Bret Lott broadens his stylistic range, striking a surprisingly surreal tone with stark, hyperrealistic prose. As story after dazzling story deliberately takes you down a deceptively ordinary path, the arresting center of each startles your unsuspecting sensibility.

Among the narrative gems is “Family,” in which a husband and wife bicker incessantly before realizing that their two children are missing, only to discover them in a surprising place–and in a disturbing condition. In “Everything Cut Will Come Back,” a long-distance phone call between two brothers takes a turn when their own tragic past crackles over the line. In “History,” a widow thinks she spots her son at the airport and is left instead with a simple memory of her late husband that resolves her grief. The innocence of three boys is lost when they witness a devastating winter tragedy in “The Train, the Lake, the Bridge.”

Within these pages, adulterers are unceremoniously caught, epiphanies arrive during bizarre encounters, and characters move through everyday moments with a fortitude that elevates these stories almost to mythical status. Without a stroke of false sentimentality, The Difference Between Women and Men will leave you strangely shaken–and ever aware of the odd permutations of humankind.

  • Published: 20 May 2008
  • ISBN: 9780345494702
  • Imprint: Random House US Group
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 240
  • RRP: $29.99

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Praise for The Difference Between Women and Men

"Bret Lott is the perfect miniaturist for a certain American generation. . . He is the master of the stalled car, the flat tire, the car lost in the parking lot, the snow coming down like crazy when you've lost your winter gloves. . . . These are authentic American scenarios, the ones we try to ignore but they're there all right there-- just waiting for us to lose our jobs and run out of credit."
--Carolyn See, Washington Post