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Starred
Review. Postfeminist toughness and post-hippie sentiment are the
alternating currents of this wry, tender novel by Houston (Cowboys Are
My Weakness; Waltzing the Cat; etc.) about a Colorado playwright and
her beloved Irish wolfhound. Rae hasn't had much luck with men, but her
love for her dog Dante is pure and uncomplicated. When he is diagnosed
with cancer, she puts all of her energies into prolonging his life,
volunteering him for experimental surgery. The ups and downs of the
three years he spends in remission are narrated from the perspective of
the motley friends who float in Rae's out-sized orbit. Chief among
these is Howard, the adorably histrionic actor whose love is Rae's main
consolation for the looming loss of Dante; there's also Darlene, Rae's
tough-as-nails housekeeper, who keeps things running at the ranch while
Rae's at her Denver apartment or traveling to exotic places.
Then
there's restless, jaded Jonathan, Rae's fellow playwright and best
friend; Jodi, the young bride of a surrealist painter, who moves to
Colorado and finds a soul mate in Rae; Dr. Evans, the driven vet who
labors to save Dante; and Brooklyn Underhill, Dr. Evans's idealistic
young ex-soldier assistant. And of course, Dante has his own say, as
does Rae's rambunctious second dog, Rose, and Darlene's cat, Stanley.
Houston isn't afraid to venture into boggy terrain—readers who squirm
at the notion that dogs have human "moms" and "souls as deep and
authentic as anything in creation" will resist being carried along at
first—but the novel's humor and irony are bracing, and different voices
provide welcome contrasts in tone. Houston's gift for capturing the
dynamic of unorthodox webs of relationships is on pleasing display in
this gruffly warmhearted novel.
reviewer:
Publishers Weekly
Click here to find out more about Sight
Hound
In Pam Houston's
can't-put-down collection of essays, A Little More About Me, she
describes her globe-trotting adventures spanning five continents with
candor and humor, but it's the emotional journey that hits home. We
travel vicariously as Houston treks through the Himalayan kingdom of
Bhutan or dozes while a pride of lions passes her Botswana campsite,
but we're right there with her when she talks about her anger-filled
childhood, her lifelong obsession with weight, and of course, a
penchant for strong, silent types. Her willingness to put herself at
risk is her way of coping with these insecurities--each victory on skis
or in hiking boots a triumph over those nasty demons.
A self-professed nature nut (this is a woman who owns her own horses),
Houston is addicted to the next challenge (she's broken seven bones and
has twice had search parties sent out for her). Through self-reflection
and therapy, however, she's come to realize that saying no to a
dangerous endeavor can be just as empowering as conquering any class V
rapid. When she opts not to continue a particularly tricky climb in her
essay "On (Not) Climbing the Grand Teton," she explains that "true
success [lies] within the failure, in listening to my fear and standing
firm in my desire to go back down."
Houston's writing is straightforward and doesn't get mired in
innuendo--she tells it like it is. And because she's not afraid to
admit her fears and mistakes, we truly root for her to achieve the
balance she's seeking. Though some might find it hard to empathize with
someone whose concessions include drawing the line at camping out in
20-degree-below temperatures rather than 60-below, on a fundamental
level we can relate. Our coping mechanisms might not be as detrimental
to our health, but they are just as real. The powerful messages in A
Little More About Me are well worth pondering.
reviewer: Jill Fergus, Amazon.com
Pam Houston,
best-selling author of Cowboys Are My Weakness, returns to the subject
of relationships in her captivating new book, Waltzing the Cat. This
time, her heroine is Lucy O'Rourke, a bright, successful landscape
photographer in her early thirties, whose life, nonetheless, "seems
like one false start after another, way too much up and down to keep
winding up at the very same place."
More often than not, that "place" is an unsatisfying relationship.
Convinced that "anybody is better than nobody," Lucy takes up with a
string of men bound to hurt and disappoint her. In these 11 intertwined
and insightful stories, we meet Gordon, the lover turned stalker with
"a jealous streak as vicious as a heat seeking missile"; blond,
beautiful Carter, who is so physically and emotionally distant that
Lucy dubs their relationship "virtual love"; and Erik, a brilliant
Norwegian, who "keeps it together to the tune of a fifth and half of
tequila a day."
reviewer: BETH DURIS, Book Page
"Every
once in a while I come across a book like Pam Houston's book, Cowboys
Are My Weakness, which serves not just to reinforce my love
of writing and reading, but also reaches inside to do something much
greater: reinforce the joy of being alive.
This first collection of short stories by this now established author
focuses on narrators who live out west and find themselves time and
again learning the same lessons. They learn how to love the wrong man,
how to leave him, and how to handle being the one left. They learn what
it means to take pride in themselves and at the end of the day try to
figure out a way to be happy with who they are and who they want to
become."
reviewer: LAURA DAVE, Renaissance Magazine
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CHECK OUT PAM'S
UPCOMING APPEARANCES
Pam Houston Bibliography
A Little More About Me (author) (October 2000)
Tomboy Bride : A Woman's Personal Account of Life in
Mining Camps of the West (story) (June 2000)
The Best American Short Stories of the Century
(story)
Waltzing the Cat (author) (1999)
The Best American Short Stories, (story) (1999)
Lonesome Land (story) (April 1997)
Men Before Ten A.M. (words) (November 1996)
Women on Hunting : Essays, Fiction, and Poetry
by Pam Houston (Editor) (November 1994)
Cowboys Are My Weakness (author) (1992)
Sight
Hound (author) (2006)
PAM
HOUSTON DVD
Book Club Productions presents an enlightening documentary about Pam Houston,
popular author of four books and teacher of creative writing.
The DVD includes a personal interview with Pam about her life, her
ranch, her Irish Wolfhounds, and her writing process. Teaching
antidotes and bookstore readings add to this unique perspective of the
author.
Click here to find out more.
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