A Few Short Notes on Tropical Butterflies
From AwardAnnals
| Book: | A Few Short Notes on Tropical Butterflies: Stories |
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| Author: | John Murray |
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| Publisher: | HarperCollins |
And yet, despite the pull of the outer world, these stories are all about the internal world of emotions—love, loss, obsession, and conflict—and about families and how they survive. They unfold to tell of moments when people catch glimpses of their real selves, their pasts, and have flashes of understanding about their lives. In “The Hill Station,” an American-born scientist is drawn to Bombay, the homeland of her parents, where she breaks free from the confines of her well-ordered life. The title story tells of an aging surgeon who uses his grandfather’s collection of butterflies to try and make sense of his past. In “Blue” a young man—still haunted by the tragic death of his father years earlier—traverses the Himalayan mountain that would have been his father’s last climb. In “Acts of Memory, Wisdom of Man,” the son of Indian immigrants relives the summer of 1968, and the events that determined his brother’s fate.
Vivid and alive, these stories reveal whole lives—characters caught between the past and the present, between different cultures, and between their intellects and emotions. Global in scope, classical in form, evocative of place, this rich collection marks an exciting and original debut.
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Reviews
Amazon.com
John Murray trained as a doctor, and his debut collection of stories, A Few Short Notes on Tropical Butterflies, reveals its author’s background. Not all of his characters are physicians, but they tend to share a doctor’s ability to concentrate on details and compartmentalize emotions. In “The Hill Station,” the American-born daughter of Indian parents returns to India, where she speaks at a conference on infectious diseases. She is charged with new, ungovernable feelings when she finally meets actual patients with the disease she specializes in; heretofore, she had only known cholera under a microscope. Murray bumps his heroine into a new, looser way of living as she travels deeper into dirty, disease-ridden India. In the title story, a doctor mourns the loss of his sister and comes to terms with his family history, all the while examining butterflies. In “Blue,” a climber ascends a Himalayan peak under dire circumstances and encounters ghostly memories of his father. These stories of frustrated, intelligent achievers can recall Mark Helprin, and Murray has, too, some of Helprin’s ambitious scope. These stories aren’t as crystalline as Helprin’s, but that’s a small complaint to lodge against an elegant first collection. —Claire Dederer


