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Proof of Love

The Wayward Nature of Love in Tales by Chekhov, Edna O'Brien and Tobias Wolff

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Sunday, November 18, 2007

“They walked on across the asphalt; the wind gusted, driving the rain so hard that Morse had to jump back a step. Julianne took it full in the face and never so much as turned her head. Nor did the boy... He was getting something from her, ready or not. Walking into the rain, as if it weren’t raining at all.” – Tobias Wolff, “Awaiting Orders”

A morsel of Chekhov, a quirky tale from Edna O’Brien, and a touching Tobias Wolff story all touch on the wayward nature of love.
The remarkable novelist and short story writer Edna O’Brien hosted a SELECTED SHORTS evening at Symphony Space that included readings of literary favorites of hers; her own story, “Brother;” and an on-stage chat with her old friend, Fionnula Flanagan. The first story on this program is one of O’Brien’s selections, Anton Chekhov’s “AN ENIGMATIC NATURE,” in an English translation by Constance Garnett. O’Brien says that the world would be a better place if everyone had Chekhov by her bedside, and this acid drop of a story about love and hypocrisy makes us understand why. Flanagan reads.

Next is O’Brien’s own story, “Brother,” which she says derived from a tantalizing glimpse she had of a lone woman in the Irish countryside. Her woman is tormented by forbidden love, which doesn’t prevent her from being as tender and salty as many of the novelist’s unforgettable characters. Flanagan reads again, and then settles down to talk to O’Brien about the work that she says is some of the bravest to come from an Irish writer since James Joyce.

The final story on this program is taken from an evening devoted to the Houghton Mifflin publication THE BEST AMERICAN SHORT STORIES 2006, selected by that year’s editor, Ann Patchett. “AWAITING ORDERS,” by the eminent fiction and memoir writer Tobias Wolff, depicts the private torments of an officer on a stateside military base, and is both rich and spare in its glimpse of emotions that cannot be expressed. The reader is Michael Cerveris, who starred on Broadway in Stephen Sondheim’s “SWEENY TODD” and “ASSASSINS,” as well as in The Who’s “TOMMY” and the musical “TITANIC.”

An Enigmatic Nature by Chekhov, read by Fionnula Flanagan
Brother by Edna O'Brien, read by Fionnula Flanagan
Awaiting Orders by Tobias Wolff, read by Michael Cerveris
Introductions by Edna O’Brien
Interview: Fionnula Flanagan talks with Edna O’Brien.

For additional works featured on SELECTED SHORTS, please visit Symphony Space

Comments [1]

hugh b ely from bridgehampton, n.y.

I almost always(sic) enjoy your shows, but this one, a repeat(that I was lucky enough to hear the first time), was superb. Thank you so much.

May. 17 2009 04:38 PM
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