Events
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Start: 7:30 pm
In what reality do a Minotaur, an Iraq War vet, and a
Professor of Atheism coexist? Stephen O’Connor, whose fiction has been
published in The New Yorker, The Partisan
Review, and The Quarterly, brings
these disparate characters and many more together in Here Comes
Another Lesson, a surprising and haunting collection ranging from the
wildly inventive to the vividly realistic.
O’Connor’s protagonists are all, in one way or another,
idealists who cannot live according to their own ideals. They yearn for love
and fulfillment, often against fantastical, semi-apocalyptic backdrops whose
strangeness only serves to make these lives more familiar and deeply affecting.
Reminiscent of George Saunders, David Mitchell, and Haruki Murakami, O’Connor’s
short stories showcase a vibrant literary talent. The New York Times Book Review wrote that his previous collection, Rescue, had “a sense of wandering
reality [that] pervades most of the startlingly inventive stories.”
In the story “Ziggurat” (which ran in The New Yorker in June 2009), the Minotaur -- the agent of all in
life that is indifferent to human wishes -- is awakened to his own humanity by
a computer-game-playing “new girl” who has been brought to him for supper, and
then has to deal with the consequences of his own actions. In “White Fire,” the
protagonist longs for the ordinary life as husband and father after he returns
from the National Guard in Iraq.
In “The Professor of Atheism,” the title character has his beliefs challenged
when he finds himself in Paradise -- where people are granted their every wish
and frolic naked without shame -- but comes to learn that the place has a dark
side not far from its opposite.
Here Comes Another
Lesson is a compulsively readable celebration of human hopefulness and a
profound lament to a sane and gentle world that cannot exist.
Stephen O’Connor is the author of three previous books: Rescue short fiction and poetry), Will My Name Be Shouted Out? (memoir and social analysis), and Orphan
Trains (narrative history). His fiction, poetry, and journalism have
appeared in The New
England Review, Poetry Magazine, The New York Times, The Nation,
and elsewhere. O’Connor is the recipient of the Cornell Woolrich Fellowship in
Creative Writing from Columbia
University, the Visiting
Fellowship for Historical Research by Artists and Writers from the American
Antiquarian Society, and the DeWitt Wallace/Reader’s Digest Fellowship from the
MacDowell Colony. He has received a BA from Columbia
University and an MA from the University of California at Berkeley, both in English
Literature. He currently teaches at the MFA programs of Columbia
University and Sarah Lawrence, and
lives in New York City
with his wife and daughter.
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