Mr. Tall: A Novella and Stories Collection - Engaging Short Fiction for Book Clubs, Reading Enthusiasts & Literature Lovers
Mr. Tall: A Novella and Stories Collection - Engaging Short Fiction for Book Clubs, Reading Enthusiasts & Literature Lovers

Mr. Tall: A Novella and Stories Collection - Engaging Short Fiction for Book Clubs, Reading Enthusiasts & Literature Lovers

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Product Description

In Mr.Tall, his first story collection in two decades, Tony Earley brings us seven rueful, bittersweet, riotous studies of characters both ordinary and mythical, seeking to make sense of the world transforming around them. He demonstrates once again the prodigious storytelling gifts that have made him one of the most accomplished writers of his generation. In the title story, a lonely young bride terrifyingly shares a remote mountain valley with a larger-than-life neighbor, while the grieving widow of "The Cryptozoologist" is sure she's been visited by a Southern variant of Bigfoot. "Have You Seen the Stolen Girl?" introduces us to the ghost of Jesse James, who plagues an elderly woman in the wake of a neighborhood girl's abduction. In "Haunted Castles of the Barrier Islands" a newly empty-nest couple stumbles through an impenetrable Outer Banks fog seeking a new life to replace the one they have lost, while "Yard Art" follows the estranged wife of a famous country singer as she searches for an undiscovered statue by an enigmatic artist. In the concluding novella, "Jack and the Mad Dog," we find Jack-the giant killer of the stories-in full flight from threats both canine and existential. Earley indelibly maps previously undiscovered territories of the human heart in these melancholy, comic, and occasionally strange stories. Along the way he leads us on a journey from contemporary Nashville to a fantastical land of talking dogs and flying trees, teaching us at every step that, even in the most familiar locales, the ordinary is never just that.

Customer Reviews

****** - Verified Buyer

Earley has a way of adding an extra dimension to reality. It’s a dimension that heads the story in a direction that is just bizarre enough — the story stays tethered to reality, but it has a quirk that branches away. That extra dimension allows the story to teach us more than reality alone could do.All seven stories in the book have at their core a genuine, sometimes even iconic human situation. The very first story is a coming of age story for a couple (Darryl and Cheryl), seeing their daughter off to college and her own life, leaving them to fend for themselves with the starkness of a one on one relationship, no longer mediated by their daughter.Mr. Tall, the title story, moves a little farther from the realism of that first story, with a semi-mythical neighbor, a bit more thought-about than real. And by the time we reach the final story — Jack and the Mad Dog — we’re following the Jack of the Appalachian Jack Tales down the rabbit hole farther from literal reality. The world of Jack’s Tales is dissolving all around him as pop culture makes him and his tales less and less relevant.All seven stories are “regional”, set in southern hills that are secluded enough that even the landscapes seem just a bit beyond reality. Maybe I’m a little over-influenced by the final story, the Jack Tale, but where the book left me was with the feel of having experienced stories with morals, like folks tales themselves — just fantastic enough to allow you to draw out something to think about in your own life.