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The Hot Climate of Promises and Grace

64 Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
With these short stories, deeply indebted to Sufi Tales and Jataka stories (as well as to the Brothers Grimm and American folktales), Steven Nightingale offers testimonies of revelation, mischief, miracles, and grace given him by sixty–four remarkable women who've appeared in his life over time.
These delightful pieces combine humor and sensuality with surrealism and an oblique spirituality, and each becomes an opportunity of gentle instruction, invention, and entertainment. The book describes a spiritual pilgrimage, beautifully written, a unique offering from this wonderful writer.
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    • Kirkus

      Sixty-four mystical fables purportedly told to the author by powerful, entrancing women he's encountered in a far-ranging life.A securities attorney in Palo Alto, California, a mathematician in Amsterdam, a novelist in London, a hitchhiker, a carpenter, and a longtime resident of the city of Salamanca are among the storytellers credited with the short tales recounted by Nightingale (Granada: Pomegranate in the Hand of God, 2015, etc.) in his new collection. Each one sheds some light on the nature of life, love, death, sex, time, and other stuff like that. For example, a Bible scholar he meets at a theology conference in New Orleans (where he is able to observe that, as a group, theologians "have an abiding affection for gumbo and rum drinks") offers a retelling of the story of the Garden of Eden that erases original sin and makes Eve a hero. After spending the day with a Moroccan woman in her kitchen in Fez, the author learns that "Honey in the cupboard is still sweet" and "What you pay for with money, you buy with your life." A woman who works at the Elliot Bay bookstore in Seattle reveals that "the life we choose [is] more disconcerting and extraordinary than many would wish: for it turns out that whatever we do, day by day and in every minute too, by our every thought and every action, whether we want to or not, we are telling each other the truth." If these insights draw you in, make you think, or give you spiritual goosebumps, this book will be an ice cream store with 64 flavors. Many of the stories tell of women with extraordinary powers, such as "Beautiful Doctor of Faith Meets the Janitor," heard in an ICU in Dallas, Texas. A light-footed exploration of the mysteries of our existence, with the consistent theme that paradise is here on Earth. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2016
      Poet, fiction writer, and essayist Nightingale's (Granada, 2015) transcendent collection offers 64 vignettes, with a nod to folktales, which explore the wonder, grace, and humor of life and the many paths within and around it. The stories are briefly introduced by the author who explains that they were told to him by a variety of different women he has met throughout his years and various travels, including scholars, artists, investment bankers, doctors, and mathematicians. Each piece offers a glimpse into both the known and the unknown, leaving affirmations to ponder. A compass bought in an old pawnshop engenders an exploration into other lands, languages, and ways of life. With Work May Be Good for Something, a painter is befuddled when each morning she is greeted by an empty canvas that she had painted the night before. The Way She Labored tells the tale of Candela and her unconventional stint as a pastor's assistant. Inquisitive and surreal, Nightingale's imaginative tales extend into the recesses of mind and spirit as his characters grapple with life's moral and metaphysical questions.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2016
      Sixty-four mystical fables purportedly told to the author by powerful, entrancing women he's encountered in a far-ranging life.A securities attorney in Palo Alto, California, a mathematician in Amsterdam, a novelist in London, a hitchhiker, a carpenter, and a longtime resident of the city of Salamanca are among the storytellers credited with the short tales recounted by Nightingale (Granada: Pomegranate in the Hand of God, 2015, etc.) in his new collection. Each one sheds some light on the nature of life, love, death, sex, time, and other stuff like that. For example, a Bible scholar he meets at a theology conference in New Orleans (where he is able to observe that, as a group, theologians have an abiding affection for gumbo and rum drinks) offers a retelling of the story of the Garden of Eden that erases original sin and makes Eve a hero. After spending the day with a Moroccan woman in her kitchen in Fez, the author learns that Honey in the cupboard is still sweet" and What you pay for with money, you buy with your life. A woman who works at the Elliot Bay bookstore in Seattle reveals that the life we choose [is] more disconcerting and extraordinary than many would wish: for it turns out that whatever we do, day by day and in every minute too, by our every thought and every action, whether we want to or not, we are telling each other the truth. If these insights draw you in, make you think, or give you spiritual goosebumps, this book will be an ice cream store with 64 flavors. Many of the stories tell of women with extraordinary powers, such as Beautiful Doctor of Faith Meets the Janitor, heard in an ICU in Dallas, Texas. A light-footed exploration of the mysteries of our existence, with the consistent theme that paradise is here on Earth.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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