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         Carver Raymond:     more books (100)
  1. What It Used to Be Like: A Portrait of My Marriage to Raymond Carver by Maryann Burk Carver, 2006-07-11
  2. Remembering Ray: A Composite Biography of Raymond Carver by William L. Stull, Maureen P. Carroll, 1993-09
  3. Call If You Need Me by Raymond Carver, 2001-06-21
  4. A New Path to the Waterfall by Raymond Carver, 1994-01-13
  5. Conversations with Raymond Carver (Literary Conversations Series)
  6. The Carver Chronotope: Contextualizing Raymond Carver (Studies in Major Litterary Authors) by G.P. Lainsbury, 2009-04-01
  7. Reading Raymond Carver by Randolph Paul Runyon, 1994-01
  8. Raymond Carver: An Oral Biography by Sam Halpert, 1995-04-01
  9. Parlez-moi d'amour by Raymond Carver nouvelles [French] Traduites de L'American par Gabrielle Rolin by Raymond Carve, 1986
  10. Raymond Carver: Comprehensive Research and Study Guide (Bloom's Major Short Story Writers)
  11. The Visual Poetics of Raymond Carver by Ayala Amir, 2010-07-16
  12. Raymond Carver: A Study of the Short Fiction (Twayne's Studies in Short Fiction) by Ewing Campbell, 1992-01
  13. Ultramarine: Poems by Raymond Carver, 1987-10-12
  14. Whoever Was Using This Bed and Other Stories by Raymond Carver, 2007-10-31

21. Featured Author: Raymond Carver
News and reviews from The New York Times archives. Includes The carver Chronicles , DT Max s (in)famous 1998 article for The Times Magazine.
http://www.nytimes.com/books/01/01/21/specials/carver.html
Featured Author: Raymond Carver
With News and Reviews From the Archives of The New York Times In This Feature
  • Reviews of Raymond Carver's Earlier Books
  • Articles About and by Raymond Carver Recent Links
  • Michiko Kakutani Reviews 'Call if You Need Me: The Uncollected Fiction and Other Prose' (Jan. 16, 2001)
  • Claire Dederer Reviews 'Call if You Need Me' (Jan. 21, 2001)
    Marion Ettlinger/Vintage Contemporaries Raymond Carver REVIEWS OF RAYMOND CARVER'S EARLIER BOOKS:
  • Will You Please Be Quiet, Please? Short Stories
    "[The stories] have been carefully shaped, shorn of ornamentation and directed away from anything that might mislead. They are brief stories but by no means stark: they imply complexities of action and motive and they are especially artful in their suggestion of repressed violence."
  • What We Talk About When We Talk About Love
    "[The first story] . . . is fine . . . Whatever sort of symbolism Mr. Carver has in mind [in the second story], it cannot fail to be atrocious. . . . [F]rom this point on, 'What We Talk About When We Talk About Love' reads like a book by a different author. . . . There is in every line a loud and self-conscious artlessness, a double disingenuousness reflecting on itself."
  • Cathedral ,' reviewed by Irving Howe
    "[In 'Cathedral,'] there are a few [stories] that suggest he is moving toward a greater ease of manner and generosity of feeling; but in most of his work it's his own presence, the hard grip of his will, that is the strongest force. . . . [H]is abrupt rhythms and compressions come to be utterly decisive. . . . a gifted writer struggling for a larger scope of reference . . ."
  • 22. Phil Carson's Raymond Carver Page
    The American short story writer and poet raymond carver was born in Clatskanie, Oregon, on May 25, 1938, and lived in Port Angeles, Washington during his
    http://users.rcn.com/pcarson/carver/
    Page last updated 6/4/1999.
    "It's strange. You never start out life with the intention of becoming a bankrupt or an alcoholic or a cheat and a thief. Or a liar." Raymond Carver
    The American short story writer and poet Raymond Carver was born in Clatskanie, Oregon, on May 25, 1938, and lived in Port Angeles, Washington during his last ten, sober years until his death from cancer on August 2, 1988. He was a Guggenheim Fellow in 1979 and was twice awarded grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. In 1983 Carver received the prestigious Mildred and Harold Strauss Living Award which gave him $35,000 per year tax free and required that he give up any employment other than writing, and in 1985 Poetry magazine's Levinson Prize. In 1988 he was elected to the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters and was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Letters from the University of Hartford. He received a Brandeis Citation for fiction in 1988. His work has been translated into more than twenty languages. At least that's the basic biography. Of course there's no room in it for the nature of the hardship he and his family went through during most of those fifty years between birth and death. There's no mention of his marriage at 19, the birth of his two children, Christine and Vance, by the time he was 21. No mention of his sometimes ferocious fights with his first wife, Maryann. No mention, either, of his near death, the hospitalisationsfour times in 1976 and 1977for acute alcoholism.

    23. Carver, Raymond | Authors | Guardian Unlimited Books
    raymond carver (19381988). Writers don t need tricks or gimmicks or even necessarily need to be the smartest fellows on the block.
    http://books.guardian.co.uk/authors/author/0,,-230,00.html
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    RAYMOND CARVER
    "Writers don't need tricks or gimmicks or even necessarily need to be the smartest fellows on the block. At the risk of appearing foolish, a writer sometimes needs to be able to just stand and gape at this or that thing - a sunset or an old shoe - in absolute and simple amazement."

    24. Prose As Architecture: Two Interviews With Raymond Carver
    From Paris, 1987 and the Italian magazine Panorama, 1986. Translated by Professor William L Stull.
    http://titan.iwu.edu/~jplath/carver.html
    Prose as Architecture: Two Interviews with Raymond Carver Translated by William L. Stull R aymond Carver's death at fifty in 1988 cut short the career of the most influential American short story writer since Ernest Hemingway. But it did not put an end to Carver's writingor his influence. In the years since Carver's death a steady stream of posthumous works has appeared, thanks in large part to the efforts of his widow, the writer Tess Gallagher. These range from Carver's last-written book of poems, A New Path to the Waterfall (1989), to some of his earliest literary efforts: No Heroics Please: Uncollected Writings (1991) and Carnations: A Play in One Act (1992). The biographical volumes Carver Country (1990), . . .When We Talk About Raymond Carver (1991), and Remembering Ray (1993) have kept his memory alive, as have the television documentaries Dreams Are What You Wake Up From (1989) and To Write and Keep Kind (1992). And of course there's Short Cuts (1993), Robert Altman's irreverent Hollywood take on Carver's world. As Raymond Carver surely knew, when the man dies the writer gets the final word, insofar as any word is ever final. (Think of Carver's much-loved poem "Gravy," a valediction published in The New Yorker three weeks after his death.) Despite the passing of the man, then, conversation with the writer continues. During Carver's life his principal means of dialogue with readers was the interview, a medium to which he readily submitted despite his native shyness. In compiling Conversations with Raymond Carver (1990) the editors located some 50 Carver interviews (in languages ranging from Dutch to Japanese) and included 25 in the finished book. There, Carver the writer once again has the last word. "I've got a book to finish," he assures the closing interlocutor. "I'm a lucky man."

    25. PAL: Raymond Carver (1938-1988)
    raymond carver was a man who lived it all and wrote it all youthful marriage, menial labor jobs, dirt poor existence, alcoholism, near death experiences,
    http://web.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap10/carver.html
    PAL: Perspectives in American Literature - A Research and Reference Guide - An Ongoing Project Paul P. Reuben (To send an email, please click on my name above.) Chapter 10: Raymond Carver (1938-1988) Primary Works Selected Bibliography 1980-Present MLA Style Citation of this Web Page A Brief Biography ... Home Page
    Source: Bold Type: Poems by RC Primary Works Fiction Put Yourself in My Shoes Will you Please Be Quiet, Please? Furious Seasons and Other Stories What We Talk About When We Talk About Love The Pheasant Cathedral If It Please You The Stories of Raymond Carver My Father's Life Those Days: Early Writings by Raymond Carver Where I'm Calling From: New and Selected Stories Elephant and Other Stories Call If You Need Me: The Uncollected Fiction and Other Prose, Poetry Near Klamath Winter Insomnia At Night the Salmon Move Two Poems Where Water Comes Together with Other Water Ultramarine Two Poems In a Marine Light: Selected Poems A New Path to the Waterfall Editor The Best American Short Stories 1986 (with Shannon Ravenel);

    26. Raymond Carver
    Writer Short Cuts. Visit IMDb for Photos, Filmography, Discussions, Bio, News, Awards, Agent, Fan Sites.
    http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0142577/
    Now Playing Movie/TV News My Movies DVD New Releases ... search All Titles TV Episodes My Movies Names Companies Keywords Characters Quotes Bios Plots more tips SHOP RAYMOND... DVD VHS CD IMDb Raymond Carver Quicklinks categorized by type by year by ratings by votes titles for sale by genre by keyword power search credited with tv schedule biography contact news articles miscellaneous Top Links biography by votes awards news articles ... message board Filmographies categorized by type by year by ratings ... tv schedule Biographical biography other works publicity contact ... message board External Links official sites miscellaneous photographs sound clips ... video clips
    Raymond Carver
    advertisement photos board add contact details Photos Add photo(s) and resume with IMDb Resume Services
    Overview
    Date of Birth: 25 May Clatskanie, Oregon, USA more Date of Death: 2 August , Port Angeles, Washington, USA (cancer) more Trivia: Biography in: "The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives". Volume Two... more
    Filmography
    Jump to filmography as: Writer Archive Footage Writer:
  • Jindabyne Everything Goes (2004) (short story) Du bois pour l'hiver (2004) (short story) (2003) (short story) Cathedral (2002) (story) Studentova zena (2000) (novel) What We Talk About When We Talk About Love (2000) (short story) Bailar sobre agujas (1999) (story)
    ... aka Dancing on Needles (USA: video title) Prach (1999) (short story Cathedral) Autumn of the Leaves (1995) (story) (1995) (writer) Short Cuts (1993) (writings) (1993) (story) ...They Haven't Seen This... Feathers (1987) (story)
  • Archive Footage:
  • (1993) .... Himself
  • 27. Life And Letters: Rough Crossings: Reporting & Essays: The New Yorker
    The cutting of raymond carver. On the morning of July 8, 1980, raymond carver wrote an impassioned letter to Gordon Lish, his friend and editor at
    http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/12/24/071224fa_fact
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    The cutting of Raymond Carver.
    December 24, 2007
    Text Size:
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    Print ... Feeds Carver in 1984. Successful after years of obscurity, he was now confident enough to reject advice. Photograph by Bob Adelman.
    Related Links
    Primary Sources: Letters from Carver to Lish
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    Esquire Esquire , but he soon accepted an invitation to join Knopf. Lish had built his reputation at Esquire Page of Print E-Mail Feeds
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    Letter From Pakistan: Time Bomb by Steve Coll Medical Dispatch: Buying a Cure by Jerome Groopman The Political Scene: The Choice by George Packer Profiles: Lifting the Veil by Calvin Tomkins ... View All James Bond returns, the sushi scare, and more on our new culture blog Hendrik Hertzberg responds to criticism.

    28. Bold Type: Poems By Raymond Carver
    *(Want to read the first installment in a previously unreleased raymond carver story? Click here to read Kindling, brought to you by Esquire magazine.)
    http://www.randomhouse.com/boldtype/1098/carver/poem.html
    These fish have no eyes
    these silver fish that come to me in dreams,
    scattering their roe and milt
    in the pockets of my brain.
    But there's one that comes
    heavy, scarred, silent like the rest,
    that simply holds against the current,
    closing its dark mouth against
    the current, closing and opening
    as it holds to the current.
    Fear of seeing a police car pull into the drive. Fear of falling asleep at night. Fear of not falling asleep. Fear of the past rising up. Fear of the present taking flight. Fear of the telephone that rings in the dead of night. Fear of electrical storms. Fear of the cleaning woman who has a spot on her cheek! Fear of dogs I've been told won't bite. Fear of anxiety! Fear of having to identify the body of a dead friend. Fear of running out of money. Fear of having too much, though people will not believe this. Fear of psychological profiles. Fear of being late and fear of arriving before anyone else. Fear of my children's handwriting on envelopes. Fear they'll die before I do, and I'll feel guilty. Fear of having to live with my mother in her old age, and mine.

    29. Raymond Carver Interviews With Don Swaim
    Audio Interview with raymond carver by Don Swaim in RealAudio.
    http://wiredforbooks.org/raymondcarver/
    Wired For Books home Don Swaim Interviews Poetry Online
    Audio Interviews with Raymond Carver
    Ever since he was a child, his dream was to write full-time. But, once he realized he lost everything he valued during his struggles with alcoholism, he told himself his dreams would never materialize. But Raymound Carter, author of Cathedral and featured in the Best American Short Stories , got a second chance after 1977. He started his second life sober and honored by the Guggenheim Fellowship, a five-year $35,000 annual fellowship designed to allow scholars and artists to develop their craft under the freest possible conditions. The dream of writing full-time had come true. The frequent writer of poems, prose, and short stories has even contemplated writing a novel, something he never thought possible. "The idea has come to me at the right time my life, and I'm terribly happy for that," he said. He shares these experiences and more in this 1983 interview with Don Swaim. Listen in on this inspiring story of a second chance by clicking on the link below. Listen to the Raymond Carver interview with Don Swaim, 1983

    30. Essays: 'Principles Of A Story' By Raymond Carver | Prospect Magazine September
    Principles of a story From Chekhov to James Joyce, the short story defined modern fiction. The form later came to be defined by America.
    http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=7001

    31. A Small Good Thing, By Raymond Carver
    by raymond carver. Saturday afternoon she drove to the bakery in the shopping center. After looking through a looseleaf binder with photographs of cakes
    http://wings.buffalo.edu/AandL/english/courses/eng201d/asmallgoodthing.html
    A Small, Good Thing
    by Raymond Carver
    Saturday afternoon she drove to the bakery in the shopping center. After looking through a loose-leaf binder with photographs of cakes taped onto the pages, she ordered chocolate, the child's favorite. The cake she chose was decorated with a spaceship and launching pad under a sprinkling of white stars, and a planet made of red frosting at the other end. His name, SCOTTY, would be in green letters beneath the planet. The baker, who was an older man with a thick neck, listened without saying anything when she told him the child would be eight years old next Monday. The baker wore a white apron that looked like a smock. Straps cut under his arms, went around in back and then to the front again, where they were secured under his heavy waist. He wiped his hands on his apron as he listened to her. He kept his eyes down on the photographs and let her talk. He let her take her time. He'd just come to work and he'd be there all night, baking, and he was in no real hurry. The baker finished printing the information on the special order card and closed up the binder. He looked at her and said, "Monday morning." She thanked him and drove home.

    32. Home - International Raymond Carver Society
    Welcome to the International raymond carver Society (IRCS). The purpose of the IRCS is to encourage the worldwide interest in and study of the works and
    http://www.internationalraymondcarversociety.org/

    Membership

    Roster

    Calls for Papers

    Publications
    ...
    Sponsors

    Welcome to the International Raymond Carver Society (IRCS). The purpose of the IRCS is to encourage the worldwide interest in and study of the works and life of American writer Raymond Carver (1938-1988). Our goal is to promote activities that lead to the exchange of ideas and information about Carver, such as sponsoring sessions at conferences, organizing international meetings, and publishing an updated bibliography relevant to the study of Raymond Carver. We hope our web site and activities lead to facilitating communication between scholars, students, and general enthusiasts of Carver around the world. The International Raymond Carver Society is a non-profit organization, and membership is free.
    Brief History
    The IRCS was founded by a group of Carver panelists at the 2005 American Literature Association convention in Boston. Since then, the interim officers of the Society have been in a busy period of establishment, recruiting members, sponsoring sessions at several conferences, adapting our By-Laws, and pursuing affiliation with the ALA and other literary organizations.
    Our web site is still under construction; thank you for your patience!

    33. Carve Magazine - Raymond Carver Short Story Contest
    From 383 entries, here are the winners of the 2007 raymond carver Short Story Contest. 1st Place, $1000 Prize AC Koch Agashi . 2nd Place, $500 Prize
    http://www.carvezine.com/contest.htm
    2008 Contest The 2008 Contest will open April 15th and run to May 31st. Guidelines, details, and more information will be posted in the Spring 2008 issue. Announcing the Winners... From 383 entries, here are the winners of the 2007 Raymond Carver Short Story Contest: 1st Place, $1000 Prize
    AC Koch - "Agashi" 2nd Place, $500 Prize
    Julia Gordon-Bramer - "Summit" 3rd Place, $250 Prize
    Liz Skillman - "One Hundred Santas" In addition to the top three prizes, the editor is awarding two authors the "Editor's Choice Award" for their stories. They will each receive a $50 prize. Editor's Choice Awards
    Marc Phillips - "Different Than Any Day So Far" Kami Westhoff - "The Ways You Are Gone" All five stories are published in the 2007 Winter issue The Shortlist The following stories were part of the "shortlist" and were strong contenders for the final prizes: Lauren Faulkberry - "The Fire Eater"
    Deivis Garcia - "Word is Bond"
    Andrew Howard - "The Pull, The Weight"
    Michael Schiavone - "The Kind You Can't Take Aspirin For"

    34. Raymond Carver's 'Cathedral' Review On The Official Website Of Laura Hird
    I first encountered raymond carver’s writing as a poet many years ago and was singularly unimpressed. In truth the writing was merely bloated prose
    http://www.laurahird.com/newreview/cathedral.html
    www laurahird com THE NEW REVIEW Phil Carson’s Raymond Carver Page
    Website dedicated to Carver
    Raymond Carver Biography and Bibliography

    Biography and bibliography on the Books and Writers website
    Carver

    The Raymond Carver website
    ‘Prose as Architecture’

    Two interviews with Carver
    Raymond Carver Poems and Biography

    Poems and biography on the American Poems website
    Raymond Carver Profile
    Profile of Carver on the Today in Literature website Raymond Carver News and Reviews Archive Archive of news and reviews on the NY Times website 3 Poems by Raymond Carver News and Reviews Archive 3 poems by Carver on the Bold Type website Raymond Carver Annotated Works Literary annotations of several of Carver’s stories on the Literature, Arts and Medicine Database Carve Magazine Contest Page Details of the annual writing competition Raymond Carver Selected Poetry Selected poetry by Carver on the Heroes of Poetry website Audio Interview with Raymond Carver Don Swaim’s interview with Carver on the Wired for Books website ‘Three New Raymond Carver Stories Discovered’ Craig Offman’s article on the Salon.com website

    35. Raymond Carver's "epiphanic Moments" | Style | Find Articles At BNET.com
    raymond carvers epiphanic moments from Style in Arts provided free by Find Articles.
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    36. Richard Ford On Raymond Carver (New Yorker, October 5, 1998)
    A review of Richard Ford s article in The New Yorker Oct 5, 1998.
    http://www.albany.edu/offcourse/nov98/fordoncarver.html
    http://www.albany.edu/offcourse
    Richard Ford on Raymond Carver
    The New Yorker , October 5, 1998)
    by Melissa Byles.
    Life is a gooeyness whose bearings on literature have been the occasion for perennial pondering. Writing about a story by Carver, Ford offers some of his own: "Life was this way yes, we already knew that. But this life, these otherwise unnoticeable people's suitability for literary expression seemed new. One also felt that a consequence of the story was seemingly to intensify life, even dignify it, and to locate in it shadowed corners and niches that needed revealing so that we readers could practice life better ourselves. And yet the story itself, in its spare, self-conscious intensity, was such a made thing, not like life at all; it was a piece of nearly abstract artistic construction calculated to produce almost giddy pleasure." Life, in Ford's view, is something that is or flows in easily recognizable ways. About art, he makes, I believe, the following well-worn but not necessarily well-taken points: art can have an insignificant subject matter (think of old shoes in Van Gogh paintings); art makes life more worthy, and may even a surprisingly unmodern point teach us morals, a conduct; yet art is not like life, in that art is a calculated construction, while life involves less calculation than chance. Ford clarifies this somewhat further on: "And in plain enough ways, when we told those stories to each other, in 1979, they meant something albeit something simple: that life goes this way or life goes that way; that chance is always involved, and that living is usually just dealing with consequences. In one way or other, of course, fiction is often about just that: sorting through consequences the past impending on the present and setting into sometimes astonishing motion the future."

    37. The Paris Review - The Art Of Fiction No. 76
    carver My God, no! I hope I’ve made that clear. Cheever remarked that he could always Careful, Issue No. 88 Glimpses raymond carver, Issue No.
    http://www.parisreview.org/viewinterview.php/prmMID/3059

    Return to Interview Archive Index

    RAYMOND CARVER
    The Art of Fiction No. 76 Issue 88, Summer 1983 View a manuscript page
    INTERVIEWER
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    38. The Raymond Carver Review - Welcome
    The raymond carver Review, a peerreviewed, electronic annual, seeks to publish the best critical work both from established and emerging carver scholars
    http://dept.kent.edu/english/RCR/
    ISSN 1940-6126 The Raymond Carver Review Kent State University Welcome Issue: The Raymond Carver Review, a peer-reviewed, electronic annual, seeks to publish the best critical work both from established and emerging Carver scholars world-wide. Essays that explore the literary and cultural significance of the work of American writer Raymond Carver are welcome. Work accepted for publication in The Raymond Carver Review will be available to readers, researchers, and scholars as downloadable PDF files. Back issues will be available as archives. The Raymond Carver Review RCR is produced in cooperation with The International Raymond Carver Society Issue One , the open topics inaugural issue, will be on-line in the winter of 2007. Issue Two , a special issue on Carver and Feminism Issue Three will be an open topics issue, and will be online in 2009. Essays for consideration for Issue Three can be submitted at this time for consideration. Issue Four, a special topics issue with a guest editor

    39. NPR: Rights Battle Brews Over Un-Edited Carver Stories
    In 1981, Knopf published a collection of short stories by raymond carver called What We Talk About When We Talk About Love. Now carver s widow wants his
    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=17910720

    40. Raymond Carver — Infoplease.com
    carver, raymond, 1938–88, American shortstory writer, b. Clatskanie, Oreg. He was raised in the Pacific Northwest, where he often set his sparely written
    http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0810664.html
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      Carver, Raymond
      Carver, Raymond, Will You Please Be Quiet, Please? What We Talk About When We Talk About Love Cathedral Where I'm Calling From (1988), and the posthumously published Call If You Need Me (2001). Carver also wrote poetry, which was collected in such volumes as

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