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One Day's Perfect Weather
Daniel Stern
其他書名
More Twice Told Tales
出版
Southern Methodist University Press
, 1999
主題
Fiction / Literary
Fiction / Short Stories (single author)
ISBN
0870744453
9780870744457
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=9U9bAAAAMAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
In this collection, Stern’s third, he returns to the literary adventure he began in
Twice Told Tales
and continued in
Twice
Upon
a Time
--weaving fresh modern tales from the thematic threads of great texts of the past. His premise is that a classic work by a writer or artist one loves "could be basic to a fiction: as basic as a love affair, a trauma, a mother, a landscape, a job, or a sexual passion.” Each of the seven tales in One Day’s Perfect Weather uses elements from an earlier work. Each story is independently vibrant and vital but, infused by the energy and creative tension of the backdrop work of art, it takes on added reverberations of meaning: rich, entertaining, and wise.
In "Duet for Past and Future,” inspired by Robert Frost’s "The Road Not Taken,” Newman, a lawyer in Indianapolis, having lost his musical career (along with his wife and child), thinks he recognizes the very cello he had sold to finance his legal education and new life. He and the young woman who plays that cello become involved in a relationship that threatens to tie them together for a moment or forever.
In "A Man of Sorrows and Acquainted with Grief,” inspired by Johann Sebastian Bach’s "The Passion According to St. John,” Kraft, an exiled New Yorker and a Jew, is the conductor of a high school orchestra in a small Texas town. He talks his way out of a traffic ticket by telling the born-again state trooper of his own special relationship with Jesus; Kraft tells the credulous lawman that the reason he exceeded the speed limit was that he’d been carried away by Bach’s "Passion” on the car radio. The resulting comic imbroglio turns Kraft’s life upside down.
In the title story, inspired by Frost’s "Grievances and Griefs,” a dying stage director and his new Russian-born wife, who has acute but temporary arthritis, are confined to a sickroom from which only one of them will ultimately emerge. Determined to escape their fate, if only for one perfect spring day, they make a comic and touching game of weighing their mutual and personal woes.