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Officer Friendly and Other Stories Kindle Edition
The stories in this acclaimed debut all take place in the state of Maine—which quickly comes to stand for the state we're all in when we face the moments that change our lives forever. Two roughneck hockey players are kicked off the team and forced to join the drama club. A young bartender at a party of coastal aristocrats has to deal with the surreal request to put a rich old coot out of his misery. Can a father defend his family if the diver helping to free the tangled propeller of their boat turns out to be a real threat?
With humor, a piercing eye, and a sense that danger often lies just around the corner, Robinson gives us a variety of vivid characters, wealthy and poor, delinquent and romantic, while illuminating the mythic, universal implications of so-called ordinary life. These stories are at once classic and modern; taken together, they bring the good news that an important, compassionate new voice in American fiction has arrived.
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
Funny, unexpected, and always oddly poignant, this story teller has a voice that pulls you right in (Elizabeth Strout)
Robinson establishes himself as a writer with a seductive, edgy voice in this dark debut collection. (Publishers Weekly)
From the Back Cover
With humor, a piercing eye, and a sense that danger often lies just around the corner, Robinson gives us a variety of vivid characters, wealthy and poor, delinquent and romantic, while illuminating the mythic, universal implications of so-called ordinary life. These stories are at once classic and modern; taken together, they bring the good news that an important, compassionate new voice in American fiction has arrived.
About the Author
Lewis Robinson was born in Natick, Massachusetts, and grew up in Maine. He attended Middlebury College and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, where he was a teaching-writing fellow and winner of the Glenn Schaeffer Award. He has written for Sports Illustrated and the Boston Globe, and has had day jobs ranging from fire warden to crab slaughterer. He lives in Portland, Maine.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Diver
Peter walked into the store in his wet bathing suit. He'd never been to Point Allison before - it was on the western edge of that remote, depressed part of Maine that didn't get much traffic. There was no one by the cash register, no one in the grocery aisles, or in the small hardware section, or behind the sandwich counter. By the back windows, though, a man with a crew cut and a brown mustache sat on a bench drinking coffee.
"I'm wondering - excuse me, I'm sorry - I need a hand," said Peter. He could feel water from his suit rolling down his legs.
"You've been out swimming," said the man.
"Can you help me?" asked Peter.
"Damn cold, isn't it?"
"Well, it's just - my wife is out there in the boat, with our baby, and we're tangled up. The propeller is all fouled."
"You need a diver," said the man.
"Exactly," said Peter.
"Tough day for it, Sunday," said the man. He had a long face with a square jaw; there was a frankness to his expression that Peter saw as vaguely canine - he looked like a spaniel.
"Divers don't work on Sunday?"
"I don't know one who does."
"Could you give me a name? I could call him and ask."
"What's your question?"
"I don't really know what to do. I have a baby out there, and my wife - she's scared." In fact, Peter was the one who'd been alarmed; Margaret was fine. Most likely she was reading her book.
"Get a price ready," said the man. "Know your price. That's what he'll be looking for."
"Price? I have no idea. Twenty-five bucks?"
"Fifty, minimum."
"Can you give me a name?" asked Peter.
"Why'd you swim in?" the man asked.
"We were stranded out there," said Peter.
"Don't have a rowboat?"
"The line came loose today. We were towing one, but we didn't notice when it came loose. I guess we lost it in the channel."
"You sure the propeller is fouled?"
"There's a huge tangle of rope around it. I saw it. I swam down."
"I know a diver."
"Could you give me his number?"
"I know a number," said the man. "What's your price?"
Peter removed a soggy mass of bills from the pocket of his bathing suit. "Well, there's sixty. My wife might have more."
"That should be fine," said the man.
"Is there a phone here?"
"I'll do it. I'll dive."
"You're a diver?"
"Not on Sundays."
Peter smiled meekly. "Could you do it, though?"
"Well, it is a Sunday, friend." He sipped his coffee, then rolled the cup back and forth in his palms.
"More than sixty?"
"Just pulling your leg," said the man. "I'll do it for fifty."
They walked side by side down the hill to the town wharf. Blackberry bushes taller than Peter flanked the dirt road. The air was clear enough to see the Matinicus Lighthouse in the far distance. At lunchtime, Peter and Margaret had sailed past the lighthouse, which was set on a small rock outcrop, five miles away from any island. Two puffins had swirled around their mast, then flown back toward the rocks, landing in the surf. It had been warm, and the baby was sleeping in the cabin below. Margaret mentioned her desire to be a lighthouse keeper; she said it was the most romantic job in the world. Peter said it would be boring and lonely and cold - it would make you go crazy. Plus, he said, all lighthouses are run automatically these days. "You're lots of fun," she said. They headed closer to the wind, tightened the sails, and as Peter steered the boat, Margaret knelt on a seat cushion and pulled off Peter's suit. "Now we're talking," Peter said. He thought of God. He thought about heaven, about dying and living forever in the clouds.
Theirs was a good marriage. They had similar interests: sailing and food and local politics and camping. They rarely disagreed. Peter felt happy and content; Margaret had long brown hair and light blue eyes; she had an athletic figure and a graceful way of carrying herself. The restaurant turned a decent enough profit and it kept their lives full. He felt close to her when they made love. There was always a part of him, though, that remained well insulated, entirely separate. This was not by plan; when she knelt there in the cockpit, for example, he looked at the top of her head, gazed out to sea, and he felt exalted but alone. He would hug her afterwards, and she smiled and kissed him. This is fine, he assured himself. It's great.
Sunlight slanted across Point Allison, catching the sides of the dozen or so lobster boats all pointed in the same direction, with their glossy hulls and radar cylinders. Peter's small sailboat faced the other way.
"I wonder which boat is yours," said the diver. "Might it be that yacht, friend?"
"That's it," said Peter. "Not much of a yacht, really."
"Bet you got cocktails out there, though."
"Sure."
"You're a lawyer?"
"No."
"Doctor?"
"We run a restaurant. We live here."
"Here?"
"In Portland."
"That's not quite here, friend," said the diver.
The diver kept his equipment in a box on the public wharf, hidden under the walkway. He stripped down to his briefs, then stepped into the neoprene suit. He was stocky; maybe he'd been a high-school football player. He smelled of tobacco and mildew and sharp, sour sweat. Peter saw himself in the diver's eyes: wearing a bright blue and yellow swimming suit, getting his propeller wound up in lines. A yachting jackass.
"You know what it looks like down there?" asked the diver.
"Not really," said Peter.
"Imagine the thickest fog you've ever seen," he said. "But it's brown."
"Polluted?"
"No, just mud. It's clean around here. Lobstermen, purse seiners, draggers, mussel farms." He grinned. "But you know what they say."
Peter shook his head.
"Clean water makes for dirty minds, and dirty minds make for lively winters," said the diver. "Or something like that." He laughed with shiny white teeth.
"Many fish down there?" asked Peter. Once he'd said it, it seemed like just the kind of question a jackass yachtsman would ask.
The diver pulled the wet suit hood down over his head and zipped the jacket. "Plenty. They're hard to see, though. They sneak up on you. You know what a sculpin looks like? They come out of nowhere. They're covered in sharp spines with big bulging eyes and huge rubbery mouths." He opened his eyes wide and stuck out his lower lip, then laughed at himself. His neck strained; it was broad and muscular.
"You must see lobsters down there, too."
"Oh, they're like cockroaches. They're everywhere. And they eat anything, garbage and dead fish. They eat their brothers, too, like cannibals." He smiled and strapped a knife to his leg.
"What's that for?" asked Peter.
"Say you get your hoses tangled in kelp. Or a shark comes at you." The diver took the knife out of its sheath and wiped off the blade, then, to test its sharpness, scraped it on his palm.
"Shark?"
"Come on, friend," said the diver. "Joke."
"Oh," said Peter. "Right."
"The seals here bite, though."
"Seals?"
"Jesus, you're gullible. Where'd you say you're from again?"
"We live in Portland."
"Where's that?" asked the diver.
Peter looked at him. Then he forced out a laugh.
"You almost thought I was that dumb," said the diver. "I'm pretty dumb, but I know where Portland is. I may not run a fancy restaurant, but I know where the city is, friend." He attached the hoses to his tank, then hefted it all to his back and clipped himself in. "Grab me those flippers, will you?"
Peter grabbed them and handed them to the diver. "You're my diving buddy, friend," the diver said. "Don't let me sink."
The diver fell in backwards, which made the tank slap hard against the water. Peter dove in. He hated to swim; he was slow, and being in the water - having to swim a distance, slowly - made him feel weak. He was looking forward to warm food. The diver put his hands behind his head and flippered along on his back, powering himself out to the boat, and bobbed there, waiting.
Margaret set out the swimming ladder, leaning over the side, wearing a green bathing suit under an unbuttoned dress shirt. Her cheeks were flushed from wine; her hair hung on her shoulders and fell across her face.
"Cold?" she asked, smiling.
"Freezing," said Peter. He climbed the ladder and she wrapped him in a towel the size of a picnic blanket.
"Oh, come on. It's toasty. You got to toughen up, friend," said the diver. He looked up at Margaret and said, "Hello, dearie." She nodded back at him. He unsheathed his knife and set it between his teeth, clutching it there like a pirate. "Arrrrr," he said. Margaret put her arm around Peter and laughed. Then the diver grabbed the knife with his neoprene mitt and said, "I'll go take a look. If I don't come up in a few minutes, you better come down and get me." He put the regulator in his mouth and submerged. Foot-wide bubbles broke the surface.
"What a creep," said Peter.
"He seems harmless," said Margaret.
"He really played me up there. He got me to count my money before he told me he was a diver."
"Shush," she said. "Just look at how beautiful this place is."
They'd never been as far up the coast - the spruce forest was dark purple; the low sun cast yellow light against the small clapboard houses. The wind was dying and the water was black. Breezes swept across the harbor, ruffling the glaze.
She put her hands on Peter's neck, and when she kissed him he could taste the wine; she pressed into him and he moved his hand to the top of her swimsuit, easing it down and kissing the top of her breast.
He nodded toward the cabin. "Is Chloe sleeping?"
"She hasn't peeped since we arrived."
"Will you promise me something?" asked Peter.
"Yes?"
"Just promise me you won't invite this guy for dinner, okay?"
"Why would I do that?"
"Because you do that. You know you do. You get caught up and next thing, we've got Jehovah Witnesses in our living room."
"Oh, please," said Margaret. "They were sweet. And it was February and they'd been walking around for hours."
"Just promise," said Peter.
"They were Mormons, by the way."
He wanted as much time alone with her as possible; he wanted to break through the lonely feeling he'd been having, and the sailing trip had been in his mind for a long time. He knew it would be good for them.
Excerpted from Officer Friendly and Other Storiesby Lewis Robinson Copyright © 2003 by Lewis Robinson
Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.Copyright © 2003 Lewis Robinson
All right reserved.
Product details
- ASIN : B003SE7ZEO
- Publisher : HarperCollins e-books; 1st edition (November 30, 2010)
- Publication date : November 30, 2010
- Language : English
- File size : 4.4 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 252 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,684,509 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #2,523 in Literary Short Stories
- #25,092 in Single Authors Short Stories
- #29,796 in Crime Fiction (Kindle Store)
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2018Lewis Robinson tells a Maine story with local grace, humor, and a touch of cruelty - brilliant.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2013I was intrigued to read these stories after reading an article that selected Robinson's "The Diver" as one of the most disturbing America dhort stories. Included in this selection, "The Diver" certainly fits that bill. But the other stories are wonderful, too, and this slim but rich collection is highly recommended.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 31, 2007It appears this book is out of print, which is truly a shame. The prose is economical but never terse. It evokes the beauty, the mystery and the humor of Maine and life in general. I re-read these stories with great frequency; the stories and characters are complex enough to merit multiple "visits."
- Reviewed in the United States on November 7, 2019Great read!
- Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2024Stories, Puckheads and Officer Friendly we're given to my class at SCGSAH to read aloud. We also read The Paperhanger, Bullet in the Brain, and What We Talk About When We Talk About Love by different authors that week. These short stories changed my perspective on literature. It's imperative we continue to cherish great literary work in a world of diminished social interaction. They carve out and frame the human condition in such beautifully written prose that they should always be celebrated deliberately and undeniably.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 10, 2009One might surmise that after reading Lewis Robinson's collection of short stories entitled Officer Friendly and Other Stories, his setting would most invariably be located in the Pacific Northwest, perhaps in Alaska. Though no less intriguing than the storylines from the shows Twin Peaks or even Northern Exposure, the content of Robinson's stories actually take place in the surprisingly curious state of Maine.
Robinson's collection is an interesting insight just beyond the seemingly perpetual thaw of Maine, not only into local hunting or hockey cultures, but of the ever changing relationships formed in the snow, along the coast and within the forest. Often the stories deal with an emergence into adulthood, but more so the rites of passages faced by many in Maine, whatever their ages.
The stories themselves range from the creepy to the serenely cathartic, though like the weather, they're always in a state of flux hovering just around the thaw. Take for example, the stories The Diver, The Toast, and Ride ; both are increasingly unsettling to say the least, as they introduce to the reader the unfamiliar eccentricities of being foreign to the Northeast. Puckheads, Seeing the World and Fighting at Night, on the other hand, deliver a sense of fulfillment no matter what was sacrificed from each character.
One captivating attribute of the book is that as a whole, time is not necessarily linear. The setting can resemble the era of F. Scott Fitzgerald or perhaps that of last March. Whether duck hunting with one's father, evading a policeman in the snow, preparing to fight someone named Brick Chickisaw, or leaving home to fish for urchin on a whim, Robinson evokes a sense of wonder and exhiliration regardless of what era he writes.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2003I concur wholeheartedly with the previous reviewer. Though all connected by an ever present, and never static, sense of place, each of Robinson's stories stand as individually gripping flashes of storytelling brilliance. This is my favorite kind of short story collection. You know, the kind where after each story, you feel compelled to stop and enjoy the sense of being pleasantly adrift in the momentum of the telling, released at the end to coast and glide through unnameable emotions, delicate and poignant. As much as they are tied together in Point Allison and its surrounding areas, Robinson's characters also share residency in a wonderfully infectious sense of longing and reflection and unease. This reader's current favorites are "The Edge of the Forest..." and "Cuxabexis, Cuxabexis". Ah Cuxabexis!
Robinson's gift for seemingly effortless natural puppetry with his characters (with place and location always acting as a character of the flesh) makes the collection seem at times like a wonderfully non-linear novel. I look forward to future offerings from this splendid new voice in fiction. This is only the beginning. Clearly Robinson comes from a gifted and talented family.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2003First of all, this is clearly the work of an emerging American Master. Show me a short story published in the last five years that can hold up to Puckheads, and I'll give you a wet willy! Where in the Hayseus did this guy come from? None of these stories were ever published before this book came out? This simply astonishes me. the OilCan will go down as saying that this is the greatest book about Maine that ever was published. This includes this year's pullitzer, sorry Russo, but have you read this guy? Someone should ask Jason Fulford if he thought this Robinson would write a book twice as good as Delillo? the OilCan would rather have this hardback than HBO.
Top reviews from other countries
- Paul whittleReviewed in Canada on November 12, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars A great story teller
A great story teller. I love his unadorned prose and a great portrait of life in a northern town.