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Ordination
Scott A. Kaukonen
“If my mother were to tell the story . . .” So begins the title piece in this
debut collection of short fiction, eight stories that explore the gap between
the stories we tell ourselves and the stories we have lived. In “Punitive
Damages,” a father, the beneficiary of a huge financial settlement in
compensation for his son’s death, must confront the truth of the life that the
son’s death has provided. In “Punnett’s Squares,” winner of the Chicago
Tribune’s Nelson Algren Award, an adopted son seeks to prove, against all
evidence to the contrary, that his adoptive father is in fact his biological
father. In “Induction Ceremony,” a small-town basketball hero returns to his
hometown no longer a man but now a woman, and his onetime teammate-and-friend
must reconsider who they were and who they are now. In the pair of pieces that
bookend the collection, “Ordination” and “Be a Missionary,” a Baptist preacher’s
son must reconcile the distance between the evidence of things seen and the
evidence of things unseen.
These are men and boys who like to see themselves as worthy of the titles of father, son, husband, lover, and friend, but who must fight their own instincts and desires to claim such honors. These are boys and men for whom questions of identity—biological, cultural, sexual, religious, moral—are unavoidable, men and boys always seeking to be who they want to be, always aware of who they are.
Scott A. Kaukonen, winner of the Chicago Tribune Nelson Algren Award, is a Ph.D. student in English and Creative Writing at University of Missouri-Columbia.
Mar
2005 Fiction/short stories (single author) 150 pp. 6x9 |
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$31.95 cloth 978-0-8142-0991-2 | Add cloth to shopping cart |
$14.95 CD 978-0-8142-9067-5 | |
The Ohio State University Prize in Short Fiction |