![]() I started my first chemo treatment on August 16th. I’ve been to the doctor more times in the past 2.5 months than I care to ever count. Since then, I’ve had tests, scans, procedures, hospital visits, etc. August 6, 2021, was the worst day of my entire life. I kept looking at Chris with tear-filled eyes saying, “why me? Why now?” Thinking about things a 28 year old wouldn’t “normally” ever imagine. ![]() Was it ovarian or colon? My entire world flipped upside down… as I thought about my kids, my family, my life. Long story short, a large cyst was found on my ovary during my c-section, and was sent to pathology for testing… and a few weeks later, I received the results that it was cancerous. 3 weeks after Leo was born, I was diagnosed with stage 4 colon cancer. And I could use all the prayers I can get. Lyrical moments suggest it is enough for writing to be beautiful, and that beauty is enough to justify art’s existence.My plan was to keep this private, but at this point in time, I know there’s power in prayer. “In this remarkable new collection, the Midwestern sensibility travels to Spain, Italy, New Zealand, California, and the ‘Geritol Valley’ of Arizona. He ought to be in every library where we keep our grown-up pleasures.” ![]() “Chris Fink is writing some of the best stories being written today. “In this book of 14 stories, Fink has offered us a virtuoso collection in which he addresses with unflinching insight, humor, and empathy his characters’ complicated interior lives, which so often are a welter of confusion and misguided love.” “Obligations to families or traditions pull on the characters, building excellent, compelling stakes within their routine lives.” “Short fiction devotees will appreciate this display of Fink’s range and ambition.” He is the author of Farmer’s Almanac and the editor of the Beloit Fiction Journal. These quiet, often introspective stories pack an outsized punch.Ĭhris Fink is a professor of English at Beloit College. Fink’s gift for voice and keen observation of place display the male psyche against unfamiliar backgrounds in high relief. Many of the narratives center on the melancholic dislocations of Midwestern men-dislocations provoked by forces ranging from the unknown terrain of travel to emerging romantic relationships. Many of Chris Fink’s characters have outgrown their rural roots but still feel ill-equipped for the urbane scenarios in which they find themselves. The dark and stunning stories in Add This to the List of Things That You Are explore how we sustain relationships when everything goes sideways and how we find meaning when the old patterns and structures of life give way. A divorcé plays homewrecker across Finland and Russia while his worldly possessions sit in a full self-storage unit. An old mercenary explains the history of edible eel in New Zealand. This memorable, humorous, and poignant collection will stick with me for a long time.”Ī cat culler in an Arizona trailer park community mulls his daily routine. The result is a collection rich with a diversity of voices, perspectives, and stories. But Fink is confident and cosmopolitan enough to range wherever he damn well pleases, and certainly far afield from the collection’s magnetic center-the American Midwest. Rooted in place, these stories are genuine and often heartbreaking. “This story collection represents everything I love about great writing. UW Press: Add This to the List of Things That You AreĪdd This to the List of Things That You Are
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