wnyc.org / 93.9fm / am 820

Selected Shorts

Sunday, October 29, 2006
  • small town

    Small Town

    "...[S]he reduced the story to a vignette; the vignette to an anecdote; the anecdote to an aphorism; and the aphorism at last to this haiku:

    Tiny upstate town
    Undergoes many changes
    Nonetheless endures."
    --J. Robert Lennon, “Eight Pieces for the Left Hand.”


    An eerie glimpse of a small town, and a rural interlude from a comic master.

    Robert Lennon's stories are available for purchase at Amazon.com

This program features a remarkable intersection of two works. When host Isaiah Sheffer and the producer of Symphony Space’s literary programs, Katherine Minton, first selected J. Robert Lennon’s story “Eight Pieces for the Left Hand” for inclusion in the live season of SELECTED SHORTS, its title suggested that a musical accompaniment might be in order, and the theatre’s musicians in residence, the Ying Quartet, suggested Ned Rorem’s “United States,” a quartet in seven movements. To everyone’s general astonishment, the first rehearsal revealed that the story—a darkly humorous look at small town life--and Rorem’s sinuous and yearning piece, might have been made for each other. The effect is fully realized in Stephen Lang’s arresting reading. The story is from Lennon’s collection Pieces for the Left Hand, and he is also the author of Happyland, which was serialized in Harper’s, and has been featured in Best American Short Stories. Stephen Lang’s many stage and film credits include Wait Until Dark, Hamlet, Death of a Salesman, and Gods and Generals.

The James Thurber stories Americans know best are the ones he tells about his Ohio boyhood, such as “The Night the Bed Fell” or “The Night the Ghost Got In,” and of course, such classics as “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.” But Thurber, cartoonist and writer for the urbane New Yorker, also penned subtler pieces, like our second story, “The Wood Duck,” zestfully read by the actor, writer, and political activist, Malachy McCourt.

“Eight Pieces for the Left Hand” by J. Robert Lennon, read by Stephen Lang, accompanied by the Ying Quartet performing Ned Rorem’s “United States.”
“The Wood Duck by” James Thurber, read by Malachy McCourt

Leave a Comment

Please stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.
Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. Names are displayed with all comments. WNYC reserves the right to edit any comments posted on this site. Please read the WNYC.org Comment Guidelines before posting.

Your comment


* required
The information entered into this form will not be used to send unsolicited email and will not be sold to a third party.