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         Carver Raymond:     more books (100)
  1. Technique and Sensibility in the Fiction and Poetry of Raymond Carver (Studies in Major Literary Authors) by Arthur F. Bethea, 2009-06-16
  2. For Tess by Raymond Carver, 1984
  3. What We Talk About When We Talk About Love (Panther) by Raymond Carver, 1998-05
  4. New Paths to Raymond Carver: Critical Essays on His Life, Fiction, and Poetry
  5. Furious Seasons by Raymond Carver, 1976-03
  6. American Masters: The Short Stories of Raymond Carver, John Cheever, and John Updike by John Updike, John Cheever, et all 1998-11-03
  7. No Heroics, Please: Uncollected Writings by Raymond Carver, 1992-06-09
  8. Raymond Carver in the Classroom: "A Small, Good Thing" (Ncte High School Literature Series) by Susanne Rubenstein, 2005-06-30
  9. The river by Raymond Carver, 1986
  10. When We Talk about Raymond Carver by Sam Halpert, 1992-06
  11. In the year 2020 by Raymond Carver, 1993
  12. Qu'est-ce que vous voulez voir ? by Raymond Carver, François Lasquin, 2002-02-24
  13. Omnibus Raymond Carver (French Edition) by Raymond Carver, 2003-03-19
  14. Tais-toi, je t'en prie by Raymond Carver, 1991-06-19

41. Powell's Books - PowellsBooks.BLOG - Carving Raymond Carver
The current issue of the New Yorker discusses raymond carver s relationship with his editor, the infamous Gordon Lish. Online, they present one of his
http://www.powells.com/blog/?p=2756

42. Salon Books | Three New Raymond Carver Stories Discovered
Three new raymond carver stories discovered Three new raymond carver stories discovered.
http://www.salon.com/books/log/1999/04/27/carver/

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Three new Raymond Carver stories discovered 09:00 p.m. PDT I n a victory of the minimalist over the Maxim-alist, Esquire magazine has turned up three unpublished Raymond Carver stories. Jay Woodruff, a senior editor at Esquire and a friend of Carver's widow, poet Tess Gallagher, told Salon Books that "Kindling" will appear in the magazine's summer fiction issue; "Vandals" and "Dreams" will follow at a later date. Carver, a perfectionist who would rewrite his stories dozens of times, had left these three in various stages of revision, but none less polished than a fifth draft. Woodruff and Gallagher are confident that the stories have all the right Carver trappings and require only a little "housekeeping." Woodruff met Carver only once, in 1986, when the future editor was a student at the Iowa Writers' Workshop ; at that time he wrote a story about the author of "Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?" and "Cathedral" for the Christian Science Monitor. But as a fan of Gallagher's poetry, Woodruff worked with her on several projects after Carver's death in 1988 first for the University of Iowa Press and then at DoubleTake magazine, where he served as managing editor.

43. Raymond Carver On LibraryThing | Catalog Your Books Online
Also known as raymond carver editor, raymond Clevie carver, Jr., R. carver, Ramond carver, There are 54 conversations about raymond carver s books.
http://www.librarything.com/author/carverraymond
Language: English [ others add a picture
Author: Raymond Carver
Also known as: Raymond Carver editor Raymond Clevie Carver, Jr. R. Carver Ramond Carver ... see complete list Members Reviews Rating Favorited Conversations
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44. SmokeLong Quarterly - Issue Eighteen - "Raymond Carver" By Dan Chaon
raymond carver walks into a bar and comes up to me to say hi. I don’t know how I recognize him, but I do. We shake hands. Jesus Christ, Mr. carver, I say.
http://www.smokelong.com/flash/6448.asp
Raymond Carver
by Dan Chaon
R aymond Carver walks into a bar and comes up to me to say hi. I don’t know how I recognize him, but I do. We shake hands. "Jesus Christ, Mr. Carver," I say. "I thought you were dead!" but he says no, he’s just gone into hiding. And I feel a great sense of being happy, even though I never knew the man. I feel relieved.
We sit there for a while, drinking beers. He is a quiet guy, and reminds me a lot of my dad, who really is dead. He has big, callused hands, oversized, like a carpenter’s. He has the old fashioned habit of leaving his money, paper bills, on the bar in front of him. When he puts his money back in his wallet, the bartender will know not to refill his glass. But while the money is there, the bartender doesn’t have to ask. I watch as Mr. Carver sips his beer and purses the foam off his lips. I don’t quite know what to say to the guy. I admire him a lot.
So instead we sit there watching the TV above the bar. It’s the local news, and the high school basketball scores are being displayed in boxes the color of swimming pools. He keeps glancing over at me wryly, and after a time he takes a cigarette from my pack and puts it up to his nose, smelling it. "Do you mind?" he says, and I watch as he puts the cigarette to his mouth and uses my lighter. He takes a long drag, and smoke curls out of his nose.
"How much do you smoke?" he says conversationally, and since I know that he was supposed to have died of lung cancer, I feel apologetic.

45. Y.P.R.: Raymond Carver Mad Libs
raymond carver Mad Libs. by Jesse Kavadlo. 1. man’s name 2. bad job 3. woman’s name 4. slightly better job 5. bad feeling 6. ing verb plus activity
http://www.yankeepotroast.org/archives/2007/06/raymond_carver.html
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Fiction
Raymond Carver Mad Libs
by Jesse Kavadlo
1. man’s name
2. bad job
3. woman’s name
4. slightly better job
5. bad feeling
6. -ing verb plus activity
7. verb plus bad decision 8. smokable thing 9. alcoholic drink 10. a different bad feeling 11. question that’s a clich© 12. terse, uncommunicative response 13. another, different bad feeling 14. a bad, dreary place 15. description of a car 16. verb that is an activity 17. greeting 18. unfriendly reply 19. angry sarcastic question 20. a really bad place 21. way of saying good bye 22. another bad place 23. another alcoholic drink 24. unusual object 25. -ing verb plus activity 26. another smokable thing 27. another alcoholic drink 28. expletive 29. made-up word 30. another expletive 31. infinitive verb Jesse Kavadlo lives in St. Louis. From the Y.P.aRchives Previously: How to Bluff Your Way Through a Heart Bypass by Jesse McLean Chuck Palahniuk Mows the Lawn by Jesse Kavadlo

46. Raymond Carver In The Classroom: "A Small, Good Thing"
They call him Ray. Ray, as in Are we going to read more Ray today? or D ya think Ray would ve liked my story? For my students, raymond carver is as real
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Raymond Carver in the Classroom: "A Small, Good Thing"
Author(s): Susanne Rubenstein
They call him Ray. Ray, as in "Are we going to read more Ray today?" or "D'ya think Ray would've liked my story?" For my students, Raymond Carver is as real as their baseball coach, the lunch line lady, or the man who drives the bus in the morning. I don't dissuade them. I think "Ray" would have welcomed their friendship.
—From the Introduction Featuring biographical information, detailed discussion of specific short stories and poems, critical analysis, and innovative activities for teaching literature and writing, Raymond Carver in the Classroom: “A Small, Good Thing” takes you into the world and work of Raymond Carver, the “father of minimalism.”

47. Raymond Carver: A Who2 Profile
raymond carver was a shortstory writer credited with revitalizing the form in the United States during the 1970s and 80s. Born and raised in the Pacific
http://www.who2.com/raymondcarver.html
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Raymond Carver was a short-story writer credited with revitalizing the form in the United States during the 1970s and '80s. Born and raised in the Pacific Northwest, Carver spent most of his childhood in Yakima, Washington. He moved to California in 1958 and took up writing in the early 1960s. During the 1960s he worked as a textbook editor, lecturer and teacher while writing, and published several short stories and his first book, Winter Insomnia (1970). His 1976 collection Will You Please Be Quiet, Please? established his reputation and featured some of his trademarks: alcohol, poverty and ordinary people in ordinary but desperate situations. Carver, who also taught writing and wrote poetry, has been called a "minimalist" because of his spare and realistic fiction, and has been compared to Ernest Hemingway and Anton Chekhov . In the late 1970s Carver required hospitalization four times in under two years for acute alcoholism. By the mid-1980s, however, he was sober, writing full-time and married to the poet Tess Gallagher (it was his second marriage). He died at the age of fifty from lung cancer, and his last collection of stories

48. Raymond Carver Quiz - Win A Book - Answers In By October 31 Please
Our quiz this issue is on one of America’s alltime great short story writers, the late raymond carver. If you think you know the answers - or close - just
http://www.barcelonareview.com/32/e_rc_quiz.htm
issue 32: september - october 2002 Raymond Carver Quiz
Quiz now over - but you can try it for fun and check your answers I f we’re lucky, writers and readers alike, we’ll finish the last line or two of a short story and then just sit for a minute, quietly. Ideally, we’ll ponder what we’ve just written or read; maybe our hearts or our intellects will have been moved off the peg just a little from where they were before. Our body temperature will have gone up, or down, by a degree. Then, breathing evenly and steadily once more, we’ll collect ourselves, writers and readers alike, get up, "created of warm blood and nerves," as a Chekhov character puts it, and go on to the next thing: Life. Always life. Raymond Carver Your Name: E-mail: (required) Sorry, but this has now been disabled
1. Raymond Carver was born in 1938 in . . .
a. Aberdeen, Washington
b. Clatskanie, Oregon
c. Ukiah, California
a. Frog

49. The Bedside Crow: Raymond Carver Reading London 1987
Previously I wrote about a tape recording of a reading by raymond carver, Richard Ford and Jonathan Raban. The event took place at The Pan Bookshop on the
http://booksellercrow.typepad.com/the_bedside_crow/2006/10/raymond_carver_.html
The Bedside Crow
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50. The Wondering Minstrels (poet)
1633, 24 Feb 2005, raymond carver, My Death, If I m lucky, I ll b 36. 915, 16 Oct 2001, Phoebe Cary, The Lovers, Sally Salter, she wa 33
http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/index_poet_C.html
The Wondering Minstrels
Main page Sorted on poet , letter C Date Poet Title Length 27 Jun 2002 Charles S. Calverley Lovers and a Reflection In moss-prankt dells... 5 Nov 1999 Charles S. Calverley Forever "Forever": 'tis a si... 4 Feb 2003 Raymond Calvert The Ballad Of William Bloat In a mean abode on t... 12 Oct 2000 Alistair Campbell At a Fishing Settlement October, and a rain-... 7 Jun 2005 Joseph Campbell The Old Woman As a white candle 12 Feb 2000 Joseph Campbell Fires The little fires tha... 7 Sep 1999 Thomas Campbell Lord Ullin's Daughter A Chieftain, to the ... 3 Oct 2000 Thomas Campion Now Winter Nights Enlarge Now winter nights enlarge 26 Feb 2004 Thomas Campion My Sweetest Lesbia (in imitation of Cat... 11 Dec 2001 Henry Carey The Ballad of Sally in our Alley Of all the Girls tha... 9 Feb 2004 Jacqueline Carey An Exile's Lament Beneath the golden balm 22 Sep 2004 Lewis Carroll You are old, Father William "You are old, father... 11 Mar 2002 Lewis Carroll A Sea Dirge There are certain th... 21 Feb 2000 Lewis Carroll The Walrus and the Carpenter The sun was shining ... 26 Sep 2001 Lewis Carroll Beautiful Soup Beautiful Soup, so r...

51. Raymond Carver | Page 1 | Poetry Archive | Plagiarist.com
Submission Guidelines Submit your work further reading about us Contact Us Links home. raymond carver (9 poems). Please visit our sponsor
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52. Raymond Carver News - The New York Times
News about raymond carver. Commentary and archival information about raymond carver from The New York Times.
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/raymond_carver/inde
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    Raymond Carver
    Marion Ettlinger/Vintage Contemporaries Raymond Carver 1938-1988 Raymond Carver came from the hardscrabble world of the down-and-out blue-collar characters in his stories. ''I'm a paid-in-full member of the working poor,'' he said in one of two interviews with The New York Times last spring. ''I have a great deal of sympathy with them. They're my people.'' Mr. Carver published 10 books of prose and poetry in a career shadowed by alcoholism, poverty, a broken marriage and cancer. In 1988 he collected what he considered the best of his stories in the book ''Where I'm Calling From.'' The novelist and critic Marilynne Robinson, reviewing it in The New York Times Book Review, said he ''stands squarely in the line of descent of American realism'' and ''should be famous for the conceptual beauty of his best stories.'' From the obituary by Stewart Kellerman, Aug. 3, 1988

53. Looking For Raymond Carver - The New York Review Of Books
Preview of an article by AO Scott from The New York Review of Books, August 12, 1999.
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/405
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By A.O. Scott Books by Raymond Carver mentioned in this essay All of Us: The Collected Poems by Raymond Carver Knopf, 386 pp., $27.50 Cathedral by Raymond Carver Vintage, 228 pp., $12.00 (paper) Fires: Essays, Poems, Stories by Raymond Carver Vintage, 204 pp., $11.00 (paper) A New Path to the Waterfall by Raymond Carver Atlantic Monthly Press, 126 pp., $10.95 (paper) No Heroics, Please: Uncollected Writings by Raymond Carver Vintage, 239 pp., $12.00 (paper) Where I'm Calling From: New and Selected Stories by Raymond Carver. tenth-anniversary edition Vintage, 526 pp., $14.00 (paper) What We Talk About When We Talk About Love by Raymond Carver Vintage, 159 pp., $10.00 (paper) Will You Please Be Quiet, Please? by Raymond Carver Vintage, 251 pp., $12.00 (paper) aj_server = 'http://rotator.adjuggler.com/servlet/ajrotator/'; aj_tagver = '1.0'; aj_zone = 'nyrb'; aj_adspot = '292481'; aj_page = '0'; aj_dim ='147520'; aj_ch = ''; aj_ct = ''; aj_kw = ''; aj_pv = true; aj_click = ''; Review, 8038 words

54. Raymond Carver Reading Series
raymond carver Reading Series. All readings begin at 530 p.m. in Gifford Auditorium, HBC Building (Huntington Beard Crouse), Syracuse University and are
http://english.syr.edu/cwp/RaymondCarverRS.htm
Creative Writing Raymond Carver Reading Series Program Faculty Reading Series Current Students
Raymond Carver Reading Series
All readings begin at 5:30 p.m. in Gifford Auditorium, HBC Building (Huntington Beard Crouse), Syracuse University and are preceded by a question and answer session from 3:45-4:30 p.m. Click Here to view videos. Wednesday, February 6 Robert Hass/Brenda Hillman, Poetry Wednesday, February 20 David Treuer, Fiction Wednesday, February 27 Michael Burkard, Poetry Wednesday, March 19 Nathan Englander, Fiction Wednesday, March 26 Tryfon Tolides, Poetry Wednesday, April 16 Wednesday, April 23 Ellen Litman, Fiction Denis Johnson, Fiction CAS Home S.U. Home

55. "Cathedral"
raymond carver. This blind man, an old friend of my wife’s, he was on his way to spend the night. His wife had died. So he was visiting the dead wife’s
http://www.ndsu.nodak.edu/instruct/cinichol/GovSchool/Cathedral2.htm
Cathedral Raymond Carver This blind man, an old friend of my wife’s, he was on his way to spend the night. His wife had died. So he was visiting the dead wife’s relatives in Connecticut. He called my wife from his in-law’s. Arrangements were made. He would come by train, a five-hour trip, and my wife would meet him at the station. She hadn’t seen him since she worked for him one summer in Seattle ten years ago. But she and the blind man had kept in touch. They made tapes and mailed them back and forth. I wasn’t enthusiastic about his visit. He was no one I knew. And his being blind bothered me. My idea of blindness came from the movies. In the movies, the blind moved slowly and never laughed. Sometimes they were led by seeing-eye dogs. A blind man in my house was not something I looked forward to.
When we first started going out together, she showed me the poem. In the poem, she recalled his fingers and the way they had moved around over her face. In the poem, she talked about what she had felt at the time, about what went through her mind when the blind man touched her nose and lips. I can remember I didn’t think much of the poem. Of course, I didn’t tell her that. Maybe I just don’t understand poetry. I admit it’s not the first thing I reach for when I pick up something to read.
Now this same blind man was coming over to sleep in my house.

56. The Raymond Carver Rights Debate—Headline Shooter—Emdashes
NPR has the story. From their web summary In 1981, Knopf published a collection of short stories by raymond carver called What We Talk About When We Talk
http://emdashes.com/2008/01/the-raymond-carver-rights-deba.php
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Filed under: Headline Shooter Tagged: books David Remnick design fiction ... Tess Gallagher
NPR has the story . From their web summary:
In 1981, Knopf published a collection of short stories by Raymond Carver called What We Talk About When We Talk About Love
What We Talk About When We Talk About Love republished. [The] New Yorker magazine has printed one of those stories in its annual fiction issue. Knopf says it owns the rights — but to what?
Update: Here it is. This letter is from Matthew Wright, who discovered Carver as a teenager in a small town about three hours away from Yakima, Washington, a central Carver site. As for me, when I read s David Gura interviewed David Remnick for the story, and it seems as though we have the answer to the question The New Yorker Later: discussion A Brief Message 5 comments
Comments
I thought the Lish edit was much better!

57. Walking The Edge - Washingtonpost.com
raymond carver IS BURIED ON A BLUFF ABOVE THE TOWN OF PORT ANGELES, upwind of the smokestacks that stoke the local paper mill.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/11/AR2007091101715.
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Raymond Carver's often-turbulent life and ground-breaking fiction reflected the rugged beauty of the Olympic Peninsula
By William Booth Sunday, September 16, 2007; Page W36 RAYMOND CARVER IS BURIED ON A BLUFF ABOVE THE TOWN OF PORT ANGELES, upwind of the smokestacks that stoke the local paper mill. His grave overlooks the Strait of Juan de Fuca , and on sunny days, when the fog curtains part, you can see across the rumbled water all the way to the woolly green islands of Canada Some knotty old-timers lay alongside Carver in the lawn at Ocean View Cemetery. The veterans of wars and sawmills, they're buried with missing fingers beside beloved wives and mothers. One lumberjack's headstone includes an engraving of his logging truck. The older families are marked with tree trunks carved in stone. For this is a country of falling timber, where wood puts food on the table. Gallery The Landscapes of Raymond Carver Exploring the last haunts and inspirations of a great American short story writer.

58. Learning To Love You More
Read raymond carver s short story Cathedral out loud with a friend. Afterwards draw the Cathedral that is described in the story one person should close
http://www.learningtoloveyoumore.com/reports/46/46.php
HELLO ASSIGNMENTS DISPLAYS LOVE ... BOOK
ASSIGNMENTS: Assignment #46
Draw Raymond Carver's Cathedral. REPORTS:
Read Raymond Carver's short story Cathedral out loud with a friend. Afterwards draw the Cathedral that is described in the story: one person should close their eyes and rest their hand on the hand of the other person who is drawing. Help the person drawing (who has his/her eyes closed) by describing the various parts of the church, etc.
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59. Raymond Carver Biography And Bibliography At LitWeb.net
raymond carver. American shortstory writer and poet, a major force in the revitalization of the short story in the 1980s. raymond carver Biography and
http://www.litweb.net/biography/207/Raymond_Carver.html
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Raymond Carver Biography and List of Works
Books by Raymond Carver Shop used books at Biblio.com American short-story writer and poet, a major force in the revitalization of the short story in the 1980s. Carver's reputation continued to grow after his death at the age of fifty. Robert Altman's much praised film Short Cuts (1993) was based on several of Carver's stories. His short fiction is often placed in the realistic tradition of Stephen Crane and Ernest Hemingway and is linked to the rise of minimalism as practiced by such writers as Ann Beattie and Tobias Wolff. "I love the swift leap of a good story, the excitement that often commences in the first sentence, the sense of beauty and mystery found in the best of them; and the fact - so crucially important to me back at the beginning and now still a consideration - that the story can be written and read in one sitting. (Like poems!)
(from foreword in Where I'm Calling From, 1998)

60. The Fake Carver: Expansive Or Minimal? -Britannica Blog
The controversy over who deserves credit for raymond carver’s early short stories has been resurrected this week by way of Motoko Rich’s article in
http://blogs.britannica.com/blog/main/2007/10/the-fake-carver-expansive-or-minim
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The Fake Carver: Expansive or Minimal?
J.E. Luebering - October 19th, 2007 The controversy over who deserves credit for Raymond Carver The New York Times Beginners NYT Some scholars have long questioned whether Carver’s published work was authentically his. and  Ms. Gallagher said the critics hadn’t read the real Carver.

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