Francine and Freddie live in a little house on the edge of the desert, with not enough money, too many snakes, no coffee, and a very strange gardener named Dennis who wants to start a security cactus ranch and is nursing a lost love. Things are ripe for dissolution.
“The Other Week” is a wickedly sharp, darkly humorous story, from one of contemporary fiction’s most singular voices—a National Book Award nominee and finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Critics Circle Award. A selection from Honored Guest, hailed as “Phenomenally interesting. . . . Miraculously and intelligently weird . . . Joy Williams wastes not a word in the stories that she tells” (Chicago Tribune).
An eBook short.
“Beautiful. . . . Unsettling. . . . [Contains] among the best American short stories of the past two decades.” –The Atlantic Monthly
“The short stories in Joy Williams’sHonored Guestare so vibrant and alive they have heartbeats, the prose so electric and dazzling it makes the pulse race.” –Vanity Fair
“By all means read, and re-read, these subtle and touching and deceptively funny and sometimes darkly magical stories.” –St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Francine and Freddie live in a little house on the edge of the desert, with not enough money, too many snakes, no coffee, and a very strange gardener named Dennis who wants to start a security cactus ranch and is nursing a lost love. Things are ripe for dissolution.
“The Other Week” is a wickedly sharp, darkly humorous story, from one of contemporary fiction’s most singular voices—a National Book Award nominee and finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Critics Circle Award. A selection from Honored Guest, hailed as “Phenomenally interesting. . . . Miraculously and intelligently weird . . . Joy Williams wastes not a word in the stories that she tells” (Chicago Tribune).
An eBook short.
Praise
“Beautiful. . . . Unsettling. . . . [Contains] among the best American short stories of the past two decades.” –The Atlantic Monthly
“The short stories in Joy Williams’sHonored Guestare so vibrant and alive they have heartbeats, the prose so electric and dazzling it makes the pulse race.” –Vanity Fair
“By all means read, and re-read, these subtle and touching and deceptively funny and sometimes darkly magical stories.” –St. Louis Post-Dispatch