About this item
Highlights
- "Levine's stories are riveting and subtle, shot through with a muted wisdom and palpable compassion.
- About the Author: PETER LEVINE earned his M.F.A. from The Writing Seminars at The Johns Hopkins University.
- 192 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Short Stories (single author)
Description
Book Synopsis
"Levine's stories are riveting and subtle, shot through with a muted wisdom and palpable compassion." ?Publisher's Weekly
Tom Mahoney is the golden boy everyone knew in school: good-looking, charming, an athlete---sought after by women, the envy of men. His success in life seems a foregone conclusion. In The Appearance of a Hero, Tom navigates the passage into adulthood, his story chronicled from every perspective but his own.
Review Quotes
"At the center of Levine's excellent debut story collection is Tom Mahoney, a young Chicago salesman with career aspirations. We follow Tom's interactions through the eyes of friends and associates: in "Our Hero David Katz," the awkward business student who tries to impress his friends with wild tales of his fictional brother's globe-trotting exploits; or Tom's neighbors, the fathers in "Princess," who, on a camping trip with their daughters, cross a delicate line. While the subjects are diverse, Tom remains the focus: his first love with a troubled older woman; his reluctant entry into the business world; being used and abandoned by women. Though a lost soul whom happiness and success eludes, to other men Tom embodies masculinity, sexual prowess, and bottomless sociability. Emasculated by modern life, these men need to believe in some fount of virility and independence. Though overly sentimental about the lost "heroes" of upper-middle-class manhood, Levine's stories are riveting and subtle, shot through with a muted wisdom and palpable compassion. He chronicles Tom's new lost generation: privileged millennials who grow up to find that life is always elsewhere." --Publisher's Weekly
About the Author
PETER LEVINE earned his M.F.A. from The Writing Seminars at The Johns Hopkins University. His work has appeared in The New York Times, The Southern Review, The Missouri Review, StoryQuarterly, and elsewhere. He has held residencies at Yaddo and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. He lives in Washington, D.C.