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Paperback The Theory of Light & Matter Book

ISBN: 0307475174

ISBN13: 9780307475176

The Theory of Light & Matter

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Book Overview

These ten stories take us across the country--from rural Pennsylvania to Southern California to suburban Connecticut--and deep into characters struggling to find meaning in their day-to-day lives. The Theory of Light and Matter is a stunningly astute vision of contemporary American suburbia, full of tension, heartbreak, and emotional complexity--the work of an important new voice. Long Listed for the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Fantastic story collection that makes you think and feel...

It's ironic--some of the best books I've read have titles that are scientific or mathematic in nature, although most of the time they have nothing to do with either subject. Add The Theory of Light and Matter to the list of best books I've read, as well as those with ironic titles. What a fantastic short story collection this was!! Andrew Porter is an absolutely phenomenal writer. I've been reading a lot of short story collections lately, and while it appears I've gotten lucky in finding some great collections, there is not one clunker in this entire book. From the title story, which tells of a college student's not-quite infatuation with her much-older physics professor, to those that chronicle everything from realizing your parents have a far more complex relationship than you can imagine to the aftermath of a friend's death when you're younger, this book hit me on so many levels. Nearly every one of these stories could be expanded into a novel I'd love to read, and it's not often I can say that. If you're looking for a great book, look no further. And if you do read it, let me know so we can discuss it!

Beautifully written collection!

Just finished reading this book and I can't stop thinking about it. The writing is gorgeous--full of poignant meditations on being human and trying your best to come to terms with the past. Porter definitely understands people--the secret thoughts we all have toward one another, the hidden motivations behind our actions. In so many of the stories ("The Theory of Light and Matter," "Azul") you get the sense that the author has looked into your heart and taken notes. Read the opening story--the fantastic "Hole"--and I dare you to put the book down. A deeply emotional reading experience--one of the best new books I've read in the past year.

Brilliant Collection of Short Stories

"The hole was at the end of Tal Walker's driveway. It's paved over now. But twelve summers ago Tal climbed into it and never came up again." 'The Theory of Light and Matter' is Andrew Porter's debut book of short stories. Mr. Porter is a graduate of the Iowa Writer's Workshop and his debut collection has already received the 2007 Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction. Originally published by the University of Georgia Press, it will be republished in a much larger edition by Vintage Books in January 2010. Hopefully, it will find the audience it deserves. The stories in this collection take place in suburbs across the country - in hallways, backyards, stairwells, schoolrooms, universities, junk yards. The collection is populated by the affluent, the impoverished, the middle class. It is a cross-current of our nation and the people who live here. There are the single, the married, the straight, the gay, the mentally ill, the young and the old. Porter is able to see deeply into the heart and culture of so many different types of lives. That is only one of the things that make this book remarkable. His style of writing is engrossing in every story in the collection. Usually, in a short story collection, one or two stories stand out. In this collection, every one is a winner; each one remains with you and takes a piece of your heart after you close the book. 'Hole' is the story of two boys who take money from an older brother to mow a lawn. During the mowing of the lawn, one of the boys falls down a hole and dies. The boy who survives spends much of his life thinking about the twists and turns of that day, trying to remember what really happened and what are figments of his memory. 'Coyotes' tells about a young man who watches as his parent's marriage falls apart. He believes that his father is a failed documentary film maker which, in a sense, he is. However, his father has serious psychiatric issues that his mother hides from their son who is too young to realize what is actually occurring. In 'Azul', a childless couple take in an exchange student and are very poor about setting limits and boundaries for him. Since they have no children of their own, they develop a vicarious family with him, only his role in the dynamic is very indistinct. Mainly, it catalyzes latent issues that already exist between the husband and the wife. The title story of the book, 'The Theory of Light and Matter', is about a female college student who is drawn to her elderly physics instructor who is about thirty years her senior. This is despite her being in love with a young man her own age. Initially, as the story opens, all the students in the physics class are taking an impossibly difficult physics test. The young woman is the only student who completes the test and hands it in. The professor invites her for tea and she accepts. This begins regular meetings and dates between them. The professor propels her to question herself and her l

Full of insight and sensitivity

The Theory of Light and Matter, a collection of ten short stories, won last year's Flannery O'Connor Award for short fiction, and it's a deserving winner. Porter's stories confront the everyday challenges of marriage and parenting and the difficulties of growing up. While exploring these ordinary themes in suburban settings, these stories reveal the subtle ebb and flow of relationships, the complexities of interacting that lie below the surfaces of normal lives, with insight and sensitivity. Porter's casual prose gives his stories an aura of reality. Nothing is strained, and the dialog is convincing. Although casual, it's a studied casualness. The sentences are carefully crafted, the words conscientiously chosen, and everything is in its place. Although I sometimes wished for something apocalyptic to happen, that would've been out of character for these stories. These intelligent and well-crafted stories, though occasionally lacking in action, are a joy to read. The book, published by the University of Georgia Press, is beautifully designed. The understated and elegant look is the perfect complement to these stories.

Radiant contemporary fiction

I had the pleasure of meeting Andrew Porter at a book reading/signing for this collection and I was quietly blown away. I had to buy the book right then and there, to find out what happens with his characters. In particular, I loved the title story, in which the protagonist (a young college girl) is torn between a deep sense of intimacy and longing for a professor and the safety of her same-age college boyfriend. Porter writes with a subtle danger, not unlike Raymond Carver or John Cheever, intoning the internal struggles of suburbia. I felt as though his characters could be walking next to me on the street or passing me in the store. They are like anyone we know, with deep wells of passion and hurt hidden away. "Hole" is a heightened "what if" story of regret for a boy who witnessed a tragedy and could have, possibly, stopped it from happening; "Azul" examines what happens to a marriage when a foreign exchange student becomes a surrogate child; "River Dog" explores the narrator's uncomfortable gut instinct that his older brother may have been involved in an assault; and "Departure" follows a teenage boy through his fascination with an Amish girl. Often, I've found contemporary short story collections to be saccharine-sweet or predictable, so "The Theory of Light and Matter" has been a treasure of a find for me. Highly recommended!!
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