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Into the Twilight, Endlessly Grousing (1997)

por Patrick F. McManus

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

Series: McManus Magazine Columns Collections (1997)

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2424110,830 (4.02)3
Patrick McManus offers wry observations about small-town life and curmudgeonly insists on bigger and bigger fish stories in this hilarious collection from one of the greatest contemporary humorists. Patrick McManus believes that life's eternal truths exist solely for the purpose of being overturned and proved incorrect. In McManus's world, nothing is what it should be. All steaks should be chicken-fried, strong coffee is drunk by the light of a campfire, and fishing trips consist of men acting like boys and boys behaving like the small animals we've always assumed they were.… (más)
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Mostrando 4 de 4
Into the Twilight, Endlessly Grousing
  ritaer | Aug 4, 2021 |
It may be his 10th collection but McManus' imagination and humor had not run dry one bit. Funny stuff from the usual "eras" of childhood and (let's be kind and call it) adulthood, with Retch, Rancid, Eddie and the rest. About the only essays that don't work for me are his mystery-flavored spoofs, but he can still spin the metaphor with the best, as in his opening description of a talk he gave "As the audience hung on my every word, a chap in the first rows suddenly lost his grip and fell into a deep slumber, dragging most of the row after him." ( )
  ChrisRiesbeck | Apr 21, 2014 |
This volume of short stories contains what is most likely my favorite Patrick McManus story of all, the story that shares its name with the book. All in all, this volume of McManus stories is right on par with his many others. It's a bit light on Crazy Eddie Muldoon and Rancid Crabtree stories, my favorite brand of McManus stories, but it is still chock full of the outlandish outdoor adventures that McManus is known for. I think the one difference between this and stories he's done before is the quiet presence of an almost melancholy longing for a bygone era in his life. Never is this more evident than in the title story, "Into the Twilight, Endlessly Grousing".

Pat decides to take a elderly friend he calls "the old man" out for a day of grouse hunting, during which he witnesses everyone swooning over his adorable senior companion while Pat gets a steady peppering of criticism from the same old codger everyone is so enamored with. Pat stoically endures however, hinting at a great indebted respect he feels toward the old man. Through it all are the understated reminders that things have changed, that the local wilderness of Pat's glory days is long gone, and that the onslaught of progress isn't through with this community yet. From the changes that have overtaken Pat's favorite local eatery to the housing developments that have sprung up in nearly all of Pat's former hunting grounds, nothing has remained the same.

Only a master storyteller like McManus could so unsuspectingly interweave such a heavy sense of forlorn remembrance with truly innocent colloquial humor that leaves the reader feeling a bit giddy, yet simultaneously thoughtful. It's a reminder of the quality that McManus has been offering up for decades and a hopeful hint of the richness that's still to come. ( )
  matthewbloome | May 19, 2013 |
McManus is one of the top authors today, if not the top, writing about the outdoors in such a way that you can't stop laughing. ( )
  Hawken04 | Feb 28, 2013 |
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» Añade otros autores (2 posibles)

Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Patrick F. McManusautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Beaver, TerryNarradorautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado

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Patrick McManus offers wry observations about small-town life and curmudgeonly insists on bigger and bigger fish stories in this hilarious collection from one of the greatest contemporary humorists. Patrick McManus believes that life's eternal truths exist solely for the purpose of being overturned and proved incorrect. In McManus's world, nothing is what it should be. All steaks should be chicken-fried, strong coffee is drunk by the light of a campfire, and fishing trips consist of men acting like boys and boys behaving like the small animals we've always assumed they were.

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