This collection, a nonbaker's dozen of what the author calls post-Frog
fictions, work written since his novel Frog - a finalist for the
National Book Award and the PEN/Faulkner Prize - was completed in 1991,
is about loss, mainly: culture ("The Rare Muscovite"), allurement ("The
Caller"), reliability ("Flying"), continuity ("Man, Woman, Boy"),
potency ("Crows"), companions ("Voices, Thoughts"), skull ("Battered
Head"), child ("Lost"), parent ("Turning the Corner"), footing ("The
Fall"), prize ("The Victor"), collection ("Moon"), as well as the flip
side of loss, not necessarily gain, triumph, or resurrection but
imaginative re-creation, creative refutation and self-destructive
creation: what-could-have-been, what-I-should-have-done,
what-never-took-place, which give the stories' stalkers a brief respite
and interim release of unagitated loss, remorse, and compatibility. The
range in emotion, situation, and technique is extreme: humorous-tragic,
raw-lyrical, implausible-believable, bedlam-calm. Long Made Short is
storytelling and story writing and also a story deleted from this
collection to shorten it and make it an even dozen.