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Talking Volumes
Jean Harfenist is the Talking Volumes selection for January 2004.

AS HEARD ON
Talking Volumes
January 14, 2003
The author discusses A Brief History of the Flood with the Talking Volumes audience at the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul.

LISTEN to the whole show, or skip to:
Reading 1
Reading 2
Reading 3
Reading 4
Reading 5
Love song medley sung by Karen Paurus
Audience Q&A

Midmorning,
December 18, 2003
Jean Harfenist discusses A Brief History of the Flood with Katherine Lanpher and takes listener calls. LISTEN

EXTRA
Themes and Threads in Jean Harfenist's A Brief History of the Flood: Producer Heather McElhatton explores the structure, tone, and metaphor of A Brief History of the Flood.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION
A Brief History of the Flood spans nearly a dozen short stories. In it author Jean Harfenist creates a coming of age story that is a gem of a read. Is this a constructed novel? a short story collection. Join the debate.

RELATED LINKS
"Water damage" from the Star Tribune

"REVIEW: 'A Brief History of the Flood' by Jean Harfenist" from the Star Tribune

An excerpt from A Brief History of the Flood

An excerpt from A Brief History of the Flood

 

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A Brief History of the Flood
Talking Volumes
A Brief History of the Flood
by Jean Harfenist
Vintage Books, 2003
Buy this book

(From the publisher) In Acorn Lake, Minnesota, Lillian Anderson has reached the end of childhood still believing her much-adored mother's worldview that life is a floating-wedding-cake fantasy fueled by love-that's it, just love. She believes it even while naming every new pet right away, because anything without a name is likely to get eaten. She believes it in spite of knowing she needs to head home when hunters are hiding behind duck blinds with their shotguns loaded and the safeties off.

But clearly, not everybody is playing by the same rules as her mother, Marion, a resolutely optimistic roller coaster of a woman, equal parts mom, little girl and sexual goddess. Especially not her father, Jack, an easily ignited alcoholic with a talent for making the entire family feel as if they're living beneath a clenched fist. When Lillian isn't tiptoeing around her parents, she's learning about life-and sex-from her two brothers and Mitzy ("My sister is the kind of girl who thinks letting Buddy Franklin fuck her in the Hoffmans' hayloft is the same thing as a date"), and from her father's mistress, Betty Boop, who tells her, "Once you learn how to cook and sew, hordes of hungry men will show up on your doorstep dragging gunnysacks full of mending."

In a family scratching its way down a small-town social ladder, Lillian barrels from childhood into her early twenties with no illusions about her future, biding her time and honing her shorthand. But as she's struggling to get on her feet and get out, her family's house-built long ago on landfill hauled in to cover the marsh-is literally going under.

This is the irresistible debut of a writer with a hypnotizing gift for place and voice, and a singular talent for capturing the best and worst of rural life; in eleven linked stories she delivers up a character with the grit and sheer exuberance needed to appreciate the best and overcome the worst. Rich in emotion and brimming with wit, A Brief History of the Flood speaks to the question of whether it is possible, or even desirable, to leave the most troubled of family histories behind, and offers clear-eyed evidence that familial love, in even the most inclement circumstances, finds purchase in us, and persists.

About the Author
Jean Harfenist
(From the publisher) Jean Harfenist's short stories have appeared in Quarterly West, Nimrod, Wisconsin Review, Sonora Review, Hayden's Ferry Review, CrazyHorse and Prism International. She lives in Santa Barbara, California.

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