The Museum at the End of the World
By (Author) John Metcalf
Biblioasis
Biblioasis
15th November 2016
Canada
General
Fiction
Short stories
FIC
Paperback
272
Width 133mm, Height 209mm
467g
"John Metcalf comes as close to the baffling, painful comedy of human experience as a writer can get."Alice Munro
Set in Nashville, Memphis, New Orleans, and Ottawa, the stories in this collection span the life of writer Robert Ford and his wife Sheila. Playing with various forms of comedy throughout, Metcalf paints a portrait of twentieth-century literary life with levity, satire, and unsuspecting moments of emotional depth.
John Metcalf is the author of more than a dozen works of fiction and nonfiction, including Standing Stones: Selected Stories, Adult Entertainment, Going Down Slow, and Kicking Against the Pricks.
Sharp and funny.Publishers Weekly These four related fictions follow a British boys coming-of-age and his older self enduring a world that rarely lives up to his standards Brings to mind variously Wodehouse, Waugh, [and] Kingsley Amis This is a book that could restore anyones faith in the pleasure of reading.Kirkus Reviews (starred) Metcalf is a gifted satirist and very, very funny...But [he] is much more than simply a jester, poking fun at the nonsensical world around him: he is beneath all of the grumbling and gruff a sentimentalist. For these stories have, at their core, a tenderness, a sadness, that is, at times, heart-rending.The Toronto Star Metcalfs humour follows the tradition of Wodehouse, Waugh and Amis (Kingsley, not Martin)... its never dull to read Metcalf. He is such a gifted stylist that you can just let yourself be taken by his sentences.The National Post Metcalf is one of Canadas most heralded practitioners of the short story, and Museum assembles work...which revels enticingly in the texture of the English language. He excels at both the wondrous...and the grotesqueMaclean's Ottawas literary lion has hit a sweet spot.The Ottawa Citizen If you yearn for comedy worthy of Waugh, or Powell, or Wodehouse, relish his savage wit. If you suspect that our culture has easily forgotten and carelessly dismissed things of real value, let Metcalf remind you what they are. The Museum at the End of the World is a wise book written by a master of short fiction, a celebration of the painstaking, exhilarating business of making art.Guy Vanderhaeghe Metcalf is best when he pokes bitchy fun at Canadian universities and the literary scene.Winnipeg Free Press Metcalf draws Forde as an observer, a noticer of life, as a passionate stylist and devoted reader of his old heroes, and a great listener and absorber of the tales and lives recounted to him by others. But Fordes tragedy, perhaps, is that he lacks insight, in a way that Metcalf does not.Hamilton Review of Books
Sharp and funny.Publishers Weekly These four related fictions follow a British boys coming-of-age and his older self enduring a world that rarely lives up to his standards Brings to mind variously Wodehouse, Waugh, [and] Kingsley Amis This is a book that could restore anyones faith in the pleasure of reading.Kirkus Reviews (starred) Metcalf is a gifted satirist and very, very funny...But [he] is much more than simply a jester, poking fun at the nonsensical world around him: he is beneath all of the grumbling and gruff a sentimentalist. For these stories have, at their core, a tenderness, a sadness, that is, at times, heart-rending.The Toronto Star Metcalfs humour follows the tradition of Wodehouse, Waugh and Amis (Kingsley, not Martin)... its never dull to read Metcalf. He is such a gifted stylist that you can just let yourself be taken by his sentences.The National Post Metcalf is one of Canadas most heralded practitioners of the short story, and Museum assembles work...which revels enticingly in the texture of the English language. He excels at both the wondrous...and the grotesqueMaclean's Ottawas literary lion has hit a sweet spot.The Ottawa Citizen If you yearn for comedy worthy of Waugh, or Powell, or Wodehouse, relish his savage wit. If you suspect that our culture has easily forgotten and carelessly dismissed things of real value, let Metcalf remind you what they are. The Museum at the End of the World is a wise book written by a master of short fiction, a celebration of the painstaking, exhilarating business of making art.Guy Vanderhaeghe Metcalf is best when he pokes bitchy fun at Canadian universities and the literary scene.Winnipeg Free Press Metcalf draws Forde as an observer, a noticer of life, as a passionate stylist and devoted reader of his old heroes, and a great listener and absorber of the tales and lives recounted to him by others. But Fordes tragedy, perhaps, is that he lacks insight, in a way that Metcalf does not.Hamilton Review of Books
John Metcalf was Senior Editor at the Porcupine's Quill until 2005, and is now Fiction Editor at Biblioasis. A scintillating writer, a magisterial editor, and a noted anthologist, he is the author of more than a dozen works of fiction and non-fiction, including Standing Stones: Selected Stories, Adult Entertainment, Going Down Slow and Kicking Against the Pricks. He lives in Ottawa with his wife, Myrna.