Charles Baxter is the author of the novels The Feast of Love (nominated for the National Book Award), The Soul Thief, Saul and Patsy, Shadow Play, and First Light, and the story collections Gryphon, Believers, A Relative Stranger, Through the Safety Net, and Harmony of the World. The stories “Bravery” and “Charity,” which appear in There’s Something I Want You to Do, were included in Best American Short Stories. He has won the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in the Short Story. Baxter lives in Minneapolis and teaches at the University of Minnesota and in the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College.
"Stunning, never predictable, glimmering fiction, full of mischief
and insight." –The Los Angeles Times
“Marvelous. . . . Baxter's prose–trenchant, funny, and apt to turn
on a metaphysical dime–remains one of the pure pleasures of
American fiction.” –The Atlantic Monthly
“For the past twenty years, Baxter has been writing some of the
finest fiction in America about love, longing and the holes we
carve in one another's hearts. . . . [Saul and Patsy is] eerily
beautiful.” — Minneapolis Star-Tribune
“Baxter at his best. He is an observer and writer of prodigious
giftsÉ. A disquieting, thoroughly enjoyable and unforgettable
novel.” — The Seattle Times
"A tale of generations at war and the troubled underside of placid
Midwestern life . . . abounding in irony and wit, and reminiscent
of Bernard Malamud and Saul Bellow." –San Francisco Chronicle
“Baxter reminds us that there is no regional monopoly on virtue and
understanding, and no easy comforts for either self-appointed
world-savers or smug populists. And for all those hard lessons,
Baxter also manages to deliver Saul and Patsy into something
astonishingly close to a happy ending. Such indeed is the glory of
love--and of fully realized fiction.” –The Washington Post Book
World
“One of our most gifted writers.” –Chicago Tribune
"Thoughts sprawl delightfully, insanely, worryingly and sometimes
brilliantly from Saul, who, we often have to remind ourselves, is
only in his twenties. . . . Funny and grown-up and generous." –The
New York Times Book Review
"Charles Baxter's novel Saul and Patsy is what it appears to be--a
love story. But underneath its placid surface broils biting social
commentary, a tale of lost teenagers adrift in a culture with no
moral center." –The Oregonian
"Saul and Patsy [is] a penetrating, surprisingly funny meditation
on the dynamics of community belonging and acceptance." –The New
York Times
"[Baxter] weaves magic into everyday life as if it were mere
coincidence. Clark Kent is to Superman as Charles Baxter is to his
writing." –Los Angeles Times
"It is rare that a novel, even a good one, manages to evoke
contemporary life without being self-conscious about it. But that
is what Baxter achieves here." –The New Yorker
"Watch out for the 'quiet Midwestern' tag on [Baxter's] writing:
That's the iceberg you will strike. There is nothing simple in his
universe, and nothing solely on the surface. Baxter's intelligence
and humor are submerged, and dangerous. You know--something like
yours." –Detroit Free Press
"Baxter . . . make[s] the mundane seem marvelous, the everyday seem
extraordinary. . . . A clever and empathetic writer." –The Capital
Times
"On almost every page at least one sentence would make me stop and
shake my head in amazement and wonder. . . . Few lessons can be
more valuable than a sense of how important the persistence of
questioning must be to any fully realized human life. Few novels
manage to renew that important sense so vividly and poignantly as
Saul and Patsy." –Logan Browning, Houston Chronicle
"Both hilarious and poignant." –The Dallas Morning News
"Baxter defies the laws of publishing gravity: He went up and has
yet to come down. . . . Baxter's new novel is just as bright and
fully imagined, just as energetic as anything that came before."
–The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
"Brilliantly exploring the emotional intricacies of a young
marriage, Charles Baxter's latest novel, Saul and Patsy, uncannily
exposes the least flattering side of human desire while celebrating
the inexplicable power that love has over our lives." –Rocky
Mountain News
"A warm, sad, subtle tale of difficult love." –O, The Oprah
Magazine
"Baxter's store of figurative language and rich, apt description is
essentially boundless, and he draws generously from it for all the
characters." –St. Louis Post-Dispatch
"More proof that Baxter is one of the best novelists anywhere.
Every line packs a double punch--what it apparently means and what
it really means." –Fort Worth Star-Telegram
"Charles Baxter has a uniquely keen eye for the seemingly minor,
ultimately telling, detail." –The Denver Post
"Baxter is a gifted, humane novelist." –Newsday
For the first quarter of this novel, even the talented John Rubinstein can't save it from sounding like Annie Hall Redux. The clash between Midwest WASP and East Coast Jew is better captured by Woody Allen in a single line. However, this quirky novel improves vastly when the none-too-bright Gordy, performed to slow-talking perfection by Rubinstein, stalks Saul's family, and the plot shifts into a different gear. Rubinstein subtly controls the voice of Gordy's aunt Brenda so that she sounds simultaneously greedy and grieving. He individuates Saul's friends and family and occasionally provides amusing sound effects-for example, Mad Dog inhaling pot and then speaking with his throat full of smoke. Rubinstein's well-paced narration extracts as much humor from the novel as possible. Unfortunately, the audio's production is far from perfect. Awkward silences separate the tracks, and each CD ends abruptly. Occasional bits of music seem randomly dropped in. Despite the technical flaws, Rubinstein's fine performance makes Saul & Patsy a notable new audio. A Vintage paperback (Reviews, Sept. 28, 2003). (Aug.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
"Stunning, never predictable, glimmering fiction, full of mischief
and insight." -The Los Angeles Times
"Marvelous. . . . Baxter's prose-trenchant, funny, and apt to turn
on a metaphysical dime-remains one of the pure pleasures of
American fiction." -The Atlantic Monthly
"For the past twenty years, Baxter has been writing some of the
finest fiction in America about love, longing and the holes we
carve in one another's hearts. . . . [Saul and Patsy is]
eerily beautiful." - Minneapolis Star-Tribune
"Baxter at his best. He is an observer and writer of prodigious
giftsE. A disquieting, thoroughly enjoyable and unforgettable
novel." - The Seattle Times
"A tale of generations at war and the troubled underside of placid
Midwestern life . . . abounding in irony and wit, and reminiscent
of Bernard Malamud and Saul Bellow." -San Francisco
Chronicle
"Baxter reminds us that there is no regional monopoly on virtue and
understanding, and no easy comforts for either self-appointed
world-savers or smug populists. And for all those hard lessons,
Baxter also manages to deliver Saul and Patsy into something
astonishingly close to a happy ending. Such indeed is the glory of
love--and of fully realized fiction." -The Washington Post Book
World
"One of our most gifted writers." -Chicago Tribune
"Thoughts sprawl delightfully, insanely, worryingly and sometimes
brilliantly from Saul, who, we often have to remind ourselves, is
only in his twenties. . . . Funny and grown-up and generous."
-The New York Times Book Review
"Charles Baxter's novel Saul and Patsy is what it appears to
be--a love story. But underneath its placid surface broils biting
social commentary, a tale of lost teenagers adrift in a culture
with no moral center." -The Oregonian
"Saul and Patsy [is] a penetrating, surprisingly
funny meditation on the dynamics of community belonging and
acceptance." -The New York Times
"[Baxter] weaves magic into everyday life as if it were
mere coincidence. Clark Kent is to Superman as Charles Baxter is to
his writing." -Los Angeles Times
"It is rare that a novel, even a good one, manages to evoke
contemporary life without being self-conscious about it. But that
is what Baxter achieves here." -The New Yorker
"Watch out for the 'quiet Midwestern' tag on [Baxter's]
writing: That's the iceberg you will strike. There is nothing
simple in his universe, and nothing solely on the surface. Baxter's
intelligence and humor are submerged, and dangerous. You
know--something like yours." -Detroit Free Press
"Baxter . . . make[s] the mundane seem marvelous, the
everyday seem extraordinary. . . . A clever and empathetic writer."
-The Capital Times
"On almost every page at least one sentence would make me
stop and shake my head in amazement and wonder. . . . Few lessons
can be more valuable than a sense of how important the persistence
of questioning must be to any fully realized human life. Few novels
manage to renew that important sense so vividly and poignantly as
Saul and Patsy." -Logan Browning, Houston
Chronicle
"Both hilarious and poignant." -The Dallas Morning News
"Baxter defies the laws of publishing gravity: He went up
and has yet to come down. . . . Baxter's new novel is just as
bright and fully imagined, just as energetic as anything that came
before." -The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
"Brilliantly exploring the emotional intricacies of a young
marriage, Charles Baxter's latest novel, Saul and Patsy,
uncannily exposes the least flattering side of human desire while
celebrating the inexplicable power that love has over our lives."
-Rocky Mountain News
"A warm, sad, subtle tale of difficult love." -O, The
Oprah Magazine
"Baxter's store of figurative language and rich, apt
description is essentially boundless, and he draws generously from
it for all the characters." -St. Louis Post-Dispatch
"More proof that Baxter is one of the best novelists
anywhere. Every line packs a double punch--what it apparently means
and what it really means." -Fort Worth Star-Telegram
"Charles Baxter has a uniquely keen eye for the seemingly
minor, ultimately telling, detail." -The Denver Post
"Baxter is a gifted, humane novelist." -Newsday
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