In Greatest Hits, Marc Sheehan tells the story of the dispossessed
better than anyone since Raymond Carver, with a lyrical élan that seems
to reveal--like a brushing away of light snowfall--those things in our
lives we hold most dear, whether it's an old stolen fiddle, a recycled
Xmas tree, or the Portable Nietzsche one reads while on break at the
factory. In a voice that is gentle yet honest, Sheehan is able to lay
bare our most desperate moments and to leave in the stillness a
redemption offered up by something as simple and beautiful as a blue
snake gliding over stones at the edge of a grassy quarry.