Description
“A Canadian master of the form.”—Gregory Cowles, New York Times
Two men who belong to are part of a commune discover two dead bodies while out sailing. A woman hits a boy with her car and contemplates turning herself in. A former military policeman, a veterinarian, and a French poet walk into a bar and debate the Vietnam war. Two paramedics try to live and not burn out while dealing with so much death. A man on holiday in Venice is stalked by a pickpocket. A heartsick astronaut finds love on the moon.
Jarman, a master of the short story, returns with another collection with his distinct and piercing voice, each sentence bursting with energy.
Praise for Burn Man
“Anyone who enjoys poetry in prose, who feels enlivened by language and struck by sentences, will find much to admire in Burn Man. Jarman’s stories are full of violence, tragedy and mistakes. Yet there’s plenty of humor and heart too . . . Burn Man left me seeing a bit more beauty in our hurting-heart world.”
—Lincoln Michel, New York Times
“The stories in Burn Man, by the Canadian writer Mark Anthony Jarman, derive from the . . . raucous lineage of Barry Hannah, Thomas McGuane and Denis Johnson . . . He gives us a gallery of antiheroes—some of them bona fide criminals but many just screwups—who are helpless in the grip of their worst impulses.”
—Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal
“In these 21 selected tales by Jarman—a Canadian writer who, if there were any literary justice, would be much better known in the US—marginalized men are on the road, on the run, failing to figure out how to stay in one place, how to stay sane, how to pin life down and make sense of it . . . Literature at the highest level: heartrending, disquieting, fascinating.”
—Kirkus Reviews (starred)