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Excerpted from Day out of Days by Sam Shepard Copyright © 2010 by Sam Shepard. Excerpted by permission.
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Kitchen 3
Haskell, Arkansas (Highway 70) 5
Chatter 14
Williams, Arizona (Highway 40 West) 16
Duarte 19
One Night in the Long-Ago 21
Indianapolis (Highway 74) 23
These Recent Beheadings 37
Classic Embrace 38
Alpine, Texas (Highway 90) 40
Mission San Juan Capistrano 43
Pity the Poor Mercenary 45
Quanah, Texas 47
Pea Ridge Battlefield, Arkansas 48
San Juan Bautista (Highway 152) 49
Brain Fever 55
Tops 56
Thor's Day (Highway 81 North, Staunton, Virginia) 57
Cracker Barrel Men's Room (Highway 90 West) 67
Face 70
Costello 71
Time Line 80
Shame 81
Esmeralda and the Flipping Hammer (Highway 152, continued) 82
Tet Offensive 85
Mean Green 86
Poolside Musings in Sunny L.A. 87
Seminole, Texas 88
Las Vegas, New Mexico 89
Nauvoo, Illinois 92
Little People 93
These Days - Grand Canyon 95
Lost Art of Wandering (Highway 152, continued) 96
Duke of Earl 102
Taos 103
Wyoming (Highway 80 East) 104
Buffalo Trace 106
Our Dwelling Is but a Wandering 108
Original Sin 109
Comanche 111
Choirboy Once 112
Cat in a Barn at Night 114
Philip, South Dakota (Highway 73) 115
Nephophobia (Veterans Highway) 116
Victorville, California (Highway 15) 118
Elko, Nevada (Thunderbird Motel) 120
Llanos 123
Faith, South Dakota (Interstate 25) 124
Reason 125
Horses Racing Men 126
Man O'War 127
"Shoe" 128
Lightning Man 129
Saving Fats 131
Bossier City, Louisiana (Highway 220) 141
Shreveport, Louisiana 144
Casey Moan 145
Mr. Williams 147
Five Spot 149
Knoxville, Tennessee (Highway 40) 150
Head in the World 153
Suddenly 155
Tall Thin White Man 156
Perpetual Warrior 159
Livingston, Montana 160
Lost Whistle163
She 165
Majesty (Highway 101 South) 166
Bright Spots 168
High Noon Moon (Highway 152, continued) 169
Orange Grove in My Past 172
Kingman, Arizona (Andy Devine Boulevard) 174
Van Horn, Texas (Highway 10) 175
Mercenary Takes a Stab at Self-Improvement 177
Interview in Cafe Pascual 179
June Bugs 182
Herdbound 183
Nine Below 184
Stillwater 185
Dawson, Minnesota (Highway 212 East) 186
Demon in the Woods 187
Gardening in the Dark 188
Happy Man 189
Promising Two-Year-Old 190
Mandan, North Dakota (Highway 94) 191
Miles City, Montana (Highway 94 West) 193
Wichita, Kansas (Highway 35 North) 194
Valentine, Nebraska (Highway 20) 195
Christopher Columbus 197
Devil's Music (Montana, Highway 2) 198
I Can Make a Deal 200
Butte, Montana 201
Get Out of Butte Altogether 203
Ft. Robinson, Nebraska (Highway 20) 204
Wounded Knee, Pine Ridge Reservation 205
Rosebud, South Dakota (Highway 83 North) 207
I Thought There Was a Hawk 208
Mojado 209
Normal (Highway 39 South) 210
Elkhorn River 213
Horse 214
Descendancy 215
Durango, Mexico 217
Tulum, Mexico 218
Boca Paila, Mexico 220
Mosquitoes 221
Quintana Roo, Mexico 222
Dogs Really Know 223
Land of the Living 224
Screened-in Porch 240
Clarksville, Missouri (Little Dixie Highway) 241
Where Are We Now? 243
The Head Reflects 244
Bernalillo 245
We Sat Around in Rosy Candlelight 246
Black Oath 247
Paul 249
Things You Learn from Others 250
Rape and Pillage 251
Should He Head North 257
Lost Coin 260
Circling 261
There's a Man in a Pay Phone 262
Back in the Woods 263
Holyoke 266
One Stone 267
Regrets of the Head 268
Indio, California 269
Wisconsin Wilderness 270
Distant Songs of Madmen 277
These Pills 278
Rogers, Arkansas (Highway 62) 280
Gracias 282
I found myself feeling a sense of guilt as I started reading this collection of short stories by Sam Shepard. It felt as if I was reading someone's journal, their diary, with all their personal ramblings being exposed to me, a stranger. I got over that, and went on to really enjoy this collection that contains very short stories, snippets of conversations, memories, poems, observations, and random musings. Shepard writes in the voice of a distant loner, hardened by truth and reality but still seeking, looking for a kind of lost artifact or talisman.
Some of the poems have titles, but most are simple and unadorned. Without the title (and sometimes without punctuation) you are left to figure out the point, and each reader could likely come away with a different impression.
Horses racing men
Mummies on the mend
What's all this gauze bandaging
Unraveled down the stairs
Has come apart
In here
Something without end (p. 126)
In "Rosebud, South Dakota (Highway 83 North)" he describes a deceptively simple scene:
Lakota church, "Open to Anyone", it says, but no one's here. Not a single sorry soul. And it's the Sabbath too. Imagine that. Sunday abandoned. Just constant wind ripping across the tattered yards and buried fences. Constant endless prairie breath. Like it's always been. Now and evermore. Unrelenting. Raw. And could care less about the state of the Union.
Shepard's subjects are dry, tired, lost, searching, guilty, sarcastic, sardonic, and grim. They inhabit truck stops, rest stops, desert paths and windy valleys. Remarkably, reading these doesn't feel depressing or dispiriting. Instead, it's almost like putting a story behind that stranger you noticed outside the diner's plate glass window, or hitchhiking outside of town, or passing you on the open rural road in that old dirty Ford pickup.
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Overview
From one of our most admired writers: a collection of stories set mainly in the fertile imaginative landscape of the American West, written with the terse lyricism, cinematic detail, and wry humor that have become Sam Shepard’s trademarks.A man traveling down Highway 90 West gets trapped alone overnight inside a Cracker Barrel restaurant, where he is tormented by an endless loop of Shania Twain songs on the overhead sound system. A wandering actor returns to his hometown against his better instincts and runs into an old friend, who recounts their teenage days of stealing cars, scoring Benzedrine, and sleeping with whores in Tijuana. A Minnesota family ...