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Dan
Chaon's short stories are luminous, polished, complete. Few
novels can survive repeated readings, and almost no short
stories (except perhaps the household tales of
the Grimm brothers). Chaon's delight again and again.
Almost
no short stories bring the literary recognition that Chaon
has already received. His work has been called distinguished
by the editors of Best American Short Stories (1990,
1993, 1999) and The Pushcart Prize (1989, 1990, 1993, 1994,
1995, 2000). Stories have been republished in anthologies
(Best American Short Stories 1996; O'Henry
Prize Stories 2001; Pushcart Prize Stories 2000,
2002, 2003).
Among
the Missing, published in the summer of 2001, was listed
among that year's notable books by the New
York Times, the Washington Post, Publisher's
Weekly and then by the American Library Association in
2001. The Chicago Tribune and Entertainment Weekly
included it among the top ten books of fiction
for 2001, the Boston Globe among the top five
books of fiction. In the fall, it was one of five finalists
for the prestigious National Book Award, a rare short-story
entry in a competition dominated by the more serious
genre of the novel.
But
Chaon's short stories are serious inquiries into the experience
of trying to figure out what things mean. Chaon's protagonists
in Among the Missing wonder especially about who's
not there at the dinner table: the mother who disappeared
from her lakefront cottage soon after a family of vacationers
was found drowned in that lake; the children born as the result
of a deposit made at a hospital sperm bank; the brother who
abandoned his wife and son, the brother who was himself abandoned
and whose own son is now leaving. It is Chaon's gift to speak
in voices other than his own, in this case particularly about
the relationship of adults and children, including ourselves
to ourselves as future adults, former children.
Born
in 1964, Chaon grew up in Sidney, Nebraska. He began writing
in junior high school and soon was sending stories to magazinesall
rejected, but at least once with kindness: Try again
when you get a little older. Chaon did. He majored in
creative writing in college (B.A. Northwestern 1986), enrolled
in the writing program at Syracuse University (M.F.A. 1990).
He met and married his wife, the writer Sheila Schwartz, and
came with her when she was hired to teach at Cleveland State
University.
Chaon
stayed home, looked after the children, worked at a variety
of part-time jobs around the Cleveland area. But writers write.
His first book of stories was published in 1996. He involved
himself with CSU's well-regarded Imagination Conference,
a weeklong series of summer workshops and lectures for writers
and would-be writers. He taught undergraduate and graduate
courses in fiction and fiction writing at Ohio University,
at CSU, and then at Oberlin, first as visiting writer, now
as assistant professor of creative writing.
He
continues to write and publish stories which continue to receive
accolades. In the meantime, Ballantine, the publisher of Among
the Missing, has reprinted his earlier collection, Fitting
Ends and Other Stories, and has contracted for a novel,
You Remind Me of Me.
text
by
Henry
D. Shapiro
Chair,
2002 Literature Jury
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My
mother owned a lakefront cabin, not far from where the bodies
were discovered. She watched from the back porch when the
car was pulled out of the water. She could hear the steady
clicking of the big tow chain echoing against the still surface
of the lake. Brown-gray water gushed from the windows and
trunk and hood as the car rose up.
There
was a family in the car: the Morrisons. They had been missing
since late May, over six weeks, and the mystery had been in
the papers for a while
Before
the bodies were discovered, my father had a theory. He said
that it would eventually come out that the father had embezzled
a large sum. Sooner or later, he said, the authorities would
catch up with them. They would find them living in a big house
under an assumed name in some distant, sunny state. Or
maybe,
said my father, maybe
they'll never catch them.
He paused, a little taken with this romantic possibility.
Maybe they'll get away with it, he said.
-Among
the Missing (Ballantine
Books, 2001)
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