All Things Are Labor
144 pages, 5 1/4 x 8 1/2
Paperback
Release Date:25 Jul 2007
ISBN:9781558496033
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All Things Are Labor

Stories

University of Massachusetts Press
The enigmatic stories in this haunting collection deal with individuals striving to live outside the dominant American culture—people who do not want to be incorporated, appropriated, or consumed. Their battles are waged on interior and external landscapes, pitting clarity against confusion, faith against fear, the marginalized against the powerful, the passive against the aggressive.
In one story, a Mennonite mother leaves her alcoholic husband and moves with her three children into an abandoned house and back to a life of faith, though a new faith, one of her own making. In another story, a teenager living in the darkness of a failing rust-belt city holds before her the only light she sees, her child, to guide the way as she moves across the border and beyond.
A young artist in New York City pursues a simple life, a passive life, the yielding life of a Mennonite, even as she immerses herself in the gritty urban culture of the East Village. Another woman, given a short time to live, sets up ant farms on her stoop in Alphabet City and is determined to discover how worlds are made by watching the ants and only the ants. A Vietnam veteran finds meaning as a dishwasher at the Catholic Worker, where he circles on his stump of a leg, aware that the thing that is missing, that cannot be seen, is most present.
Many of these stories experiment with the form of writing itself. They reflect the vision of an artist who remains separate—in the world, but not of the world—and whose goal is not to dazzle or entertain, but simply, humbly to be present for each word.
From Ohio to Arkansas to a gritty New York City neighborhood, from the ritualistic feet cleansing of the Mennonites to the trials and ultimately the triumphs of single motherhood, Arnoldi's exquisite stories are a journey through time, space, spirit, and the artistic imagination. This is art at its highest calling: personal, political, and daring to reach for the universal. In a resonate language that demands we pay attention, Arnoldi's prose pulses, whispers, then roars, singing the lives of the unsung. These stories are about class and the American dream torn open; about the spirit of writing itself and how it is language that can save us, giving voice to the silence and silenced. Katherine Arnoldi is a major talent, and All Things Are Labor is a poignant, powerful, important collection.'—Jaimee Wriston Colbert, author of Climbing the God Tree: A Novel in Stories
'Arnoldi's stories are funny. They are vivd. They are personal. They are of love. They are the words of strain from a new mother to an infant. . . . Arnoldi is an award-winning short story writer, and her new collection . . . excels at using small sounds bites to convey universal truths.'—Rain Taxi
Katherine Arnoldi teaches writing and lives in New York City. Her graphic novel, The Amazing True Story of a Teenage Single Mom (1998), received a New York Foundation of the Arts Award in Drawing and two awards from the American Library Association. She has also been awarded the New York Foundation of the Arts Award in Fiction, the DeJur Award, the Newhouse Award, and the Henfield TransAtlantic Fiction Award
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