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Book Reviews of Inventing the Abbots and Other Stories

Inventing the Abbots and Other Stories
Inventing the Abbots and Other Stories
Author: Sue Miller
ISBN-13: 9780060929978
ISBN-10: 0060929979
Publication Date: 2/1/1999
Pages: 192
Rating:
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
 30

3.5 stars, based on 30 ratings
Publisher: Perennial
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

4 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

challada avatar reviewed Inventing the Abbots and Other Stories on + 27 more book reviews
Short stories about relationships. Some great ones, some good ones, some bad ones.
reviewed Inventing the Abbots and Other Stories on + 47 more book reviews
"This collection of short stories explores the treacherously shifting ground of erotic and family relationships with deftness and depth."
reviewed Inventing the Abbots and Other Stories on + 103 more book reviews
A collection of short stories explores the treacgherously shifting ground of erotic and family relationships with deftness aND DEPTH.
Munro avatar reviewed Inventing the Abbots and Other Stories on + 95 more book reviews
From Publishers Weekly
In this collection of 11 stories, Miller exhibits the same insight into character and gift for describing contemporary relationships evidenced in The Good Mother. "The Birds and the Bees" and "Ernest" express the same subtle knowledge of a child's sensibilities and fears displayed in that novel. The mothers in "Leaving Home" and the title story learn that they cannot protect their children from the hurts of the world. No happy marriages exist here (the only one of long duration, in "Appropriate Affect,"is revealed as a sham), and the protagonists of most of the stories are individuals trying but failing to connect emotionally in a society where "all the rules have changed." In "Travel" and "Slides," men take photos of their lovers naked, pictures which survive the breakup of their relationships to provide a record of disillusionment and pain. These themes come together in the best of the tales, "The Quality of Life," which movingly articulates the stresses of trying to behave responsibly as a parent while satisfying the need for sexual compatibility. Though Miller has sympathy for all her characters, her moral vision is clear.