The View From the Seventh Layer (Vintage Contemporaries)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Peering into the often unnoticed corners of life, Kevin Brockmeier has been consistently praised for the originality of his vision, the boundlessness of his imagination and the command of his craft. Once again, in this new collection of fiction, Brockmeier shows us a fantastical world that is intimately familiar but somehow distant and beautiful. From the touching title story, where a young, antisocial woman imagines her escape into the sky with an apparition only she can see, to the haunting story of a pastor tempted by something less than divine, Brockmeier moves effortlessly from the extraordinary to the everyday, while challenging us to see the world anew. Stunning, elegant, profound, and playful, The View from the Seventh Layer cements Kevin Brockmeier's place as one of the most creative and compassionate writers of his generation.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #723050 in Books
- Published on: 2009-03-10
- Released on: 2009-03-10
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 288 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Brockmeier follows up the acclaimed The Brief History of the Dead with a collection of 13 stories possessing the enchantment of his two children's books, but with adult twists. In the title story, Olivia lives in a little red cottage on an unnamed island and sells maps, umbrellas and candies to the tourists. She also sells prophylactics and believes that, in a glorious moment, she was abducted and examined by an alien Entity who came from the seventh layer of the universe. In a more O. Henryesque story, The Lives of the Philosophers, Jacob, a philosophy grad student, is trying to understand why certain great philosophers ceased to do philosophy. He finds the answer when his girlfriend, Audrey, becomes pregnant with a child he doesn't want. In The Air Is Full of Little Spots, the narrator, a presumably Afghan tribal woman, writes of her tribe's belief that we see the world only from the back, but at moments, by the grace of God, the world turns its face to us. While many characters reach such moments of clarity, the stories often falter when they do. At their best, though, the tales show Brockmeier's mastery of the tricky intersection between fantasy and realism. (Mar.)
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From Booklist
Brockmeier’s widely praised short stories have appeared in the New Yorker and the O. Henry Prize Stories, among other well-known mainstream story venues. His frequent forays into speculative fiction, many of which are in this collection, ought to pique the interest of sf and contemporary fantasy fans as well. Star Trek buffs, for instance, will delight in “The Lady with the Pet Tribble,” which puts a futuristic spin on Chekhov’s famous tale about extramarital romance; just substitute tribble for dog in the title, and note that the love interest of its alien, starship captain protagonist has multiple husbands instead of just one. In “Father John Melby and the Ghost of Amy Elizabeth,” a pastor known for his dull sermons receives sudden evangelical power from a spirit he thinks is God but is only a lovelorn ghost. The title story recounts a lonely island girl’s encounter with an alien entity. Each carefully crafted tale filters insightful observations about life through a seductive screen of magical realism and alternates whimsy and wisdom. --Carl Hays
Review
"Kevin Brockmeier's writing has a light, magical quality that makes it a joy to read. Playful and uninhibited, imaginative and gentle, he's an American Italo Calvino."
--Lydia Millet, author of Oh Pure and Radiant Heart
"Brockmeier is one of my very favorite writers. What amazes me most about him isn't his daunting technical chops or his Millhauser-sized imagination, but that in his finest moments he combines these strengths with a deeper sense of the joys and sorrows of life. These stories are wise and touching, not merely full of delightful surprises but full of heart."
--Stewart O'Nan, author of Last Night at the Lobster
"These are beautiful and ethereal stories by an unsettling writer. Brockmeier is a major talent."
--Kevin Baker, author of Strivers Row
"Nobody has ever written stories like this. Who else could transpose Chekov into outer space, write a Choose Your Own Adventure story for the human soul, or tell the story of a man's life through the twittering chorus of his parakeets? Each of these stories contains a sentence that will blast open the walled-off regions of your heart like dynamite."
--Karen Russell, author of St. Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves
"I love Kevin Brockmeier's work, not only for its daring innovation and its boundary-defying marriage of the real and the fantastic, but also because of the deep feeling and compassion he brings to the lives of his varies characters. He is one of the best short story writers in America."
--Dan Chaon, author of Among the Missing and You Remind Me of Me
"I am totally enthralled, mesmerized, and jealous of The View from the Seventh Layer. These curious, fragile worlds drew me in like few stories published today. This collection's an instant classic."
--George Singleton, author of Novel and Drowning in Gruel
...
Customer Reviews
Abundantly satisfying
In a recent interview, Kevin Brockmeier described his approach to fiction in a way that could serve well as an apt summary of the contents of his captivating new short story collection: "I suppose I navigate the tension between the realistic and the fantastic largely by failing to recognize it," he observed, "though I don't know whether I would call this a working method or a blind spot. Typically, when I sit down to write, any fantasy I turn my mind to very quickly begins to seem stitched through with realism." By any measure, reality and fantasy mingle inextricably and with apparent ease in these 13 memorable stories.
THE VIEW FROM THE SEVENTH LAYER contains four stories explicitly labeled "fables" that are among the most affecting in the collection. From a mute in a city where "everyone had the gift of song," who raises a collection of parakeets to share the sounds of his life ("A Fable Ending in the Sound of a Thousand Parakeets"), to a man who "happened to buy God's overcoat," only to discover the myriad prayers of humanity it housed ("A Fable With Slips of White Paper Spilling From the Pockets"), these stories boast the charm of a children's tale (not surprising, considering Brockmeier has authored two children's books) and yet are rich with mature emotion.
The most strikingly original story in the collection is "The Human Soul as a Rube Goldberg Device: A Choose Your Own Adventure Story." It begins with the simple act of a man returning milk to a refrigerator. At the end of that two-page scene, the reader in effect becomes the protagonist of the tale, offered a choice between putting his "shoes on and going out for a walk" or "spending a quiet morning at home." Depending on that choice, and one made at the end of each subsequent scene, the reader is moved forward or back through the text until all choices eventually lead to the same ending, encompassing a heartbreaking tableau, "fading like a plume of smoke into the broken red skies of the city." Although the full piece covers 60 pages of text, the unique stories ensuing after each choice are much shorter, and the permutations of the tale feel infinite, inviting rereading in a spirit of experimentation and fresh discovery.
Several of Brockmeier's stories are sharp and perceptive character studies. In the title story he introduces Olivia, a reclusive young woman who sells maps on a lush tropical island, her life the encapsulation of loneliness. "She would not been surprised," Brockmeier writes, "to learn that she had become invisible." Olivia categorizes people by the types of books they read, removes insects from the home of the widow who lives next door, and dreams of someone she calls "The Entity," who she imagines someday will come to claim her and end her emotional isolation.
Another moving story is "Father John Melby and the Ghost of Amy Elizabeth." In it, a priest whose sermons are noteworthy principally for the yawns they induce in his congregants is visited by the spirit of a young woman who confesses, "I've wasted my life." For a time, her presence inexplicably inspires him to heights of spellbinding preaching, but when he rejects her presence he reverts to his former self, "damned by the purity of his devotion."
Not all of the stories here dabble in the fantastic. "Andrea Is Changing Her Name" is a wistful story of unrequited love, while "The Lives of the Philosophers" presents Jacob, a young professor struggling to complete his Ph.D. thesis on Thomas Aquinas and Friedrich Nietzsche at the same time as he tries to come to terms with the pregnancy of his girlfriend.
While not overt in his comic sensibility, Brockmeier demonstrates some startling flashes of humor. Most notably, in "The Lady With the Pet Tribble," he pays homage to the venerable Chekhov short story, at the same time crafting an ingenious plot that will appeal to the most ardent fans of "Star Trek."
In the end, a gentle, ruminative quality unifies all of the stories in this book. There's an incandescent beauty to Brockmeier's prose, one excerpt of which, from the story "The Air Is Full of Little Holes," offers a fitting benediction to this abundantly satisfying work: "But occasionally, by the grace of God, the world turns its face to us, uncovering its perfection, and though the glimpse we are given never lasts longer than an instant, we remember it for the rest of our lives."
--- Reviewed by Harvey Freedenberg (mwn52@aol.com)
13 stories from a powerful writer
The new short story collection from Kevin Brockmeier, The View from the Seventh Layer, is difficult to pigeonhole for these stories defy ready classification. Not strictly fiction genre nor completely science fiction, the author describes the collection thus: "The View from the Seventh Layer is not strictly or even primarily a work of science fiction; in a collection of thirteen stories, I would say that four of them fall squarely within the science fiction and fantasy tradition, four of them squarely outside, and the other five straddle the border, some leaning most of their weight toward realism, some toward fantasy or science fiction."
It's difficult to fully explore a collection of stories in a limited review; therefore, I've chosen to focus on two that stood out on initial reading. "A Fable Ending in the Sound of a Thousand Parakeets" is barely eight pages long and yet it hits with enough force to bring the reader to a full stop. The first story in shares a mute man's experience of living in a town where everyone communicates through song. He is "...the only person who was unable to lend his voice to the great chorus of song that filled the air."
Is this deceptively simple tale of the ultimate outsider placed here to invite readers to slow down and savour Brockmeier's tales or, by beginning his collection with a story of a man who can't speak, is he raising flags to remind readers they need to look beyond the basic meaning of his words?
"The Air is Full of Little Holes" explores the life of a woman pictured in a "magazine with a yellow border around the cover." The gentle story of a family is at odds with the ugliness which appears when western expectations meet a traditional ways of life.
The thirteen stories in The View from the Seventh Layer reflect a writer comfortable in his skin, unafraid to take risks with his characters and plots. These aren't simple stories yet readers who invest their time will be richly rewarded.
Armchair Interviews says: Excellent short story collection with a strong impact.
A elequent book filled with lovely ideas
The stories are real enough to bring tears to your eyes and fantastic in a way that makes you never want to leave. I can't wait for his next book- although there is something profoundly sad and a little disturbing about his writing. Reading "The View from the Seventh Layer" is like taking a vacation in an Escher print, and coming home to a Dali painting.





