This section contains 563 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Wall, Stephen. “Asking Too Much.” London Review of Books 12, no. 4 (22 February 1990): 20–22.
In the following excerpt, Wall explores Minot's motivations behind her minimalist techniques in Lust and Other Stories.
Susan Minot's volume [Lust and Other Stories] is a slim one, and some of the pieces in it will not placate those who complain that short stories are too often too short, rather as one might hold it against the sonnet that it's over after only 14 lines. Brevity can be the soul of more qualities than wit, and it would be a dim view of Webern to say that he lacks Schubert's heavenly length. It's true that minimalism has its own lacunal rhetoric, and leaving things out for the sake of it can be as tiresome as putting them in for the same reason, but Susan Minot has enough tact to ensure that her ellipticality doesn't seem evasive. At...
This section contains 563 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |