Five Tuesdays in Winter

Five Tuesdays in Winter

Unabridged — 6 hours, 10 minutes

Five Tuesdays in Winter

Five Tuesdays in Winter

Unabridged — 6 hours, 10 minutes

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Overview

By the award-winning, New York Times bestselling author of Writers & Lovers, Lily King's first-ever collection of exceptional and innovative short stories.

With Writers & Lovers and Euphoria, Lily King's books catapulted onto bestseller and best-of-the-year lists across the country and established her as one of our most “brilliant” (New York Times), “wildly talented” (Chicago Tribune), and beloved authors in contemporary fiction. Now, for the first time ever, King collects ten of her finest short stories-half published in leading literary magazines and half brand new-opening fresh realms of discovery for avid and new readers alike.

Told in the intimate voices of unique and endearing characters of all ages, these tales explore desire and heartache, loss and discovery, moments of jolting violence and the inexorable tug toward love at all costs. A bookseller's unspoken love for his employee rises to the surface, a neglected teenage boy finds much-needed nurturing from an unlikely pair of college students hired to housesit, a girl's loss of innocence at the hands of her employer's son becomes a catalyst for strength and confidence, and a proud nonagenarian rages helplessly in his granddaughter's hospital room. Romantic, hopeful, brutally raw, and unsparingly honest, some even slipping into the surreal, these stories are, above all, about King's enduring subject of love.

Lily King's literary mastery, her spare and stunning prose, and her gift for creating lasting and treasured characters is on full display in this curated selection of short fiction. Five Tuesdays in Winter showcases an exhilarating new form for this extraordinarily gifted author writing at the height of her career.


Editorial Reviews

DECEMBER 2021 - AudioFile

A skilled cast of seasoned narrators gives consistently disarming performances in King's first collection of short stories. The audiobook is filled with moments of want and desire and struggle. Cassandra Campbell embodies the voice of a 14-year-old au pair who is forced to ward off a father's advances, Bronson Pinchot is heartbreaking as a gay man who is invited for a drink by his homophobic college roommate years later, and Mark Bramhall captures the spirit of a boy who is left behind by his parents for the summer, only to discover his college-age caretakers open a new way of seeing his world. All the performances are subtle, occasionally humorous, and always devastating. S.P.C. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

★ 09/27/2021

National Book Critics Circle award winner King (Euphoria) delivers a rich and varied collection filled with characters whose lives are transformed by old and new acquaintances, addiction, and the written word. In the opener, “Creature,” teenage narrator Carol finds summer employment as a nanny while she reads Jane Eyre, a novel that has strange and fascinating resonances for her. In “When in the Dordogne,” the narrator, a “martini baby, conceived after one too many in late July 1971,” struggles in the wake of his father’s failed suicide. “The Man at the Door,” the collection’s finest entry, finds a writer who’s also a mother experiencing the heaven of her avocation—“This morning, however, a sentence rose, a strange unexpected chain of words meeting the surface in one long gorgeous arc”—before being quickly brought back down to earth: “The baby bleated through the monitor. She’d only managed to get three sentences on the page.” These stories crackle and shine, and King is a master of the thumbnail portrait: she can create a fully realized life in a single paragraph and then alter it in breathtaking ways. This is a must for fans of the short story. Agent: Julie Barer, the Barer Group. (Nov.)

From the Publisher

Praise for Five Tuesdays in Winter:

Finalist for The Story Prize

An Amazon Top Ten for November

A November Indie Next Pick 

One of Entertainment Weekly’s "Must Read Books of November"

One of Good Morning America's "15 Books to Curl Up With This November"

A Most Anticipated Book of Fall by Vogue, TIME, EsquirePeople, Washington Post, and LitHub

A Best Book the Year at NPR and Kirkus

“In our time of anxiety and isolation, King writes stories to curl up in, by which I mean they afford us something rarely celebrated in literature: comfort.“—New York Times Book Review


"Fierce, funny, tender stories that demonstrate both range and emotional heft.... all of them are stunners." —Boston Globe

“King returns to the page with a collection of short stories that continue to prove her prowess in all things love and human connection.”—Entertainment Weekly

“Lily King isn’t afraid of big emotional subjects: desire and grief, longing and love, growth and self-acceptance. But she eschews high drama for the immersive quiet of the everyday… Here we inhabit the worlds of authors and mothers, children and friends; we experience their lives in clear, graceful prose that swells with generous possibility. This is a book for writers and lovers, a book about storytelling itself, a book for all of us.”—Washington Post

“Like her acclaimed books Writers & Lovers and Euphoria, King’s latest finds characters longing for love and wrestling with change.”—Time

“The award-winning author of Euphoria and four other novels, speaks volumes in short form. Her new collection, Five Tuesdays in Winter, is as compelling and accomplished as anything you’re likely to read in the genre . . . Story for story, this collection is simply a knockout.”—Portland Press Herald

"These are stories of outsiders finding their people, of new perspectives, and they place King—already one of our most poignant and moving contemporary novelists—among Lorrie Moore, Alice Munro, and Mary Gaitskill as one of our great short-story writers as well." —Vogue, "Best Books to Read This Fall"

“A masterful, enchanting collection of stories illuminating the spectrum of human love—the platonic, the unrequited, the forbidden and the unconditional.” —People

"Wonderfully absorbing...All 10 of these tales build gratifyingly to moments of epiphany that never feel unearned... Long form or short, this is a writer who has mastered the art of conveying depths of human feeling in one beautiful sentence after another." —NPR

"The acclaimed author of Writers & Lovers returns with ten shimmering stories, each one a gemlike exploration of love, loss, and grief... Each masterful story reminds us that King is one of our finest cartographers of the human heart." —Esquire 

“Lily King writes about love better than anybody.” — Jenna Bush Hager, Best Books to Read in November

"Breathlessly beautiful." —Zibby Owens, Good Morning America

"King’s collection continually breaks through stereotypes, defying expectation and not allowing the reader to pinpoint anything typical about her short stories...King honors how human life is never what we think it is, always changing and morphing. By allowing characters their full range of pain, vulnerability, and happiness, Five Tuesdays in Winter drops readers into imperfect lives, evoking awe and anger and admiration and futility, reminding us how it feels to be human." —Ploughshares

"[I]t is the exquisite attention with which King articulates all that roils inside us that secures her place in the contemporary canon." — Financial Times

"Intimate and revealing, this is an unflinchingly honest and insightful collection." — Observer

“Raw yet hopeful.” —Irish Times

“The endearing, vulnerable characters in bestselling novelist Lily King’s ten clever, charming short stories are facing up to life’s dramas and demands — broken hearts, shattered illusions, troubled parents or children — with a grace that belies the damaging emotional fallout.” — Daily Mail (UK)

“King’s observations are both sharp and generous. Five Tuesdays in Winter is a collection worth dipping into again and again.”—Bookpage

"These stories crackle and shine, and King is a master of the thumbnail portrait: she can create a fully realized life in a single paragraph and then alter it in breathtaking ways. This is a must for fans of the short story." —Publishers Weekly, starred review

“[A] dazzling new collection . . . Though the protagonists range from a young girl to a middle-aged gay man to a gruff nonagenarian grandfather, the stories share certain characteristics; King is a master at conveying through subtle description the small, painful, bumbling moments of life and the awkwardness of human interactions . . . A series of beautifully written character studies brimming with insight into the human condition.” —Library Journal, starred review

“King can make you fall in love with a character fast, especially the smart, vulnerable, often painfully self-conscious adolescent protagonists featured in several of the 10 stories collected here…Full of insights and pleasures.” —Kirkus, starred review

Praise for Writers & Lovers:

New York Times Notable Book 
One of Washington Post's 10 Best Books of 2020 
One of NPR's "Fresh Air" with Maureen Corrigan's Top 10 Books of 2020 
Kirkus Best Fiction Book of 2020 Selected for Amazon's Best Literature and Fiction of 2020 
New York Times Best Seller 
New York Times Book Review Group Text Selection 
A #ReadWithJenna Book Club Pick as Featured on Today 
Belletrist Book Club April Selection by Emma Roberts 
An Indie Next Pick 
Featured in Best of 2020 lists by Washington Post, Kirkus, Vogue, Entertainment Weekly, Guardian, Marie Claire, Vulture, Lithub, People, and Amazon Book Review.

"A comic and compassionate novel . . . It shares with [Euphoria] a fascination with the difficulty of defining the worth of one's life when the familiar markers of adult achievement are slow to materialize. With wit and what reads like deep insider wisdom, Ms. King captures the chronic low-level panic of taking a leap into the artsy unknown and finding yourself adrift, without land or rescue in sight." —Maureen Corrigan, Wall Street Journal

"I loved this book not just from the first chapter or the first page but from the first paragraph. . .The voice is just so honest and riveting and insightful about creativity and life." —Curtis Sittenfeld, London Evening Standard

"Delightful . . . An unmistakable broadside against fiction's love affair with macho strivers, even— or especially— when layers of lyricism and tenderness coat their machismo. The emotional force of Writers & Lovers is considerable." —New York Times Book Review

"Romance isn't the point for Casey. Love is the gravy; words are the filet. Finding a way to build a life around work she loves, finding a way to support herself as a writer— this is the line connecting all three corners of the love triangle at the heart of this novel." —New York Times Book Review, Group Text Book Club

"Writers & Lovers made me happy. Even as the narrator grieves the loss of her mother and struggles to make art and keep a roof over her head, the novel is suffused with hopefulness and kindness. Lily King writes with a great generosity of spirit." —Ann Patchett

"Writers & Lovers is exactly the book we need now. Witty and heartfelt. . .  I could not stop reading." —Judy Blume

"This smooth, deliberate chronicle of creation keeps the men in their place and Casey firmly rooted at the center of her own story. Instead of casting her as a woman torn between archetypes of male creativity, Writers & Lovers portrays her as a woman in thrall to her own generative processes, a devotee to the art of (her own) attention." —Los Angeles Times

"Among the elements that make Writers & Lovers so winning are the perfectly calibrated little details, convincing conversations, and droll wit. . . Writers & Lovers is a book about passion, desire, grief, determination, and finding one's way. It's also about craving love, family, and success. . . generously infused with heart and soul and wit and wisdom." —NPR

"Writers & Lovers is a funny novel about grief, and, worse, it's dangerously romantic, bold enough and fearless enough to imagine the possibility of unbounded happiness." —Washington Post

"King captures the agita of an early-life crisis and the eccentricities of a writer's life, spiking the narrative with wit, sumptuous imagery and hilarious skewerings of literary elitism." —People

"King has created a woman on the cusp of personal fulfillment and strong enough to stand on her own, someone akin to Sally Rooney's Frances in Conversations with Friends . . . But King also situates Casey inside a variation of the which-lover-will-she-choose framework of, say, Nancy Meyers's film Something's Gotta Give . . .The novel is a meditation on trying itself: to stay alive, to love, to care. That point feels so fresh, so powerfully diametrically opposed to the readily available cynicism we've been feasting on . . . King wants us to keep trying, through whatever means necessary, to beat the odds." —Boston Globe

"A poignant and heartfelt novel about the effects of grief and the paths people take to get through life. I couldn't put the book down." —Seattle Times

"A down-to-earth saga of an extremely bright and likable single woman wrestling with sexual desires, emotional dreads . . . An engaging portrait of a woman confronting modern hardships." —Associated Press

"King has portrayed effectively and compassionately with well-crafted prose, evocative descriptions, and spot-on dialogue." —New York Journal of Books

"Funny and romantic and hard to put down, full of well-observed details of restaurant culture and writer's workshops. It's hard to imagine a reader who wouldn't root for Casey." —Library Journal (starred review)

"A knowing look at the pursuit of a life in the arts, with a protagonist you'll root for." —Marie Claire

"King is one of those rare writers who can entwine sadness, hilarity and burning fury in the briefest of moments." —BookPage

"An extraordinary novel . . . King beautifully documents every aspect of Casey's character. Casey's insights into the world of writing are fascinating and often humorous . . . The prose [is] linguistically sophisticated, but clean and uncluttered." —Midwest Book Review

"This novel will become a defining classic for struggling young writers." —Vulture

"A breath of fresh air, with characters that leap off the page." —Amazon Book Review

"King's gift is to suspend the reader, to make the wait for resolution fascinating." —Minneapolis Star Tribune

"Masterful . . . You can't put it down, and you'll feel larger and more connected once you finish it. Plus, it's funny as hell." —Dead Darlings

"King leaves no barrier between readers and smart, genuine, cynical, and funny Casey. A closely observed tale of finding oneself, and one's voice, while working through grief." —Booklist (starred review)

"[A] charmingly written coming of age story." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Intimate and vulnerable . . . Lily King's novel follows a deeply relatable protagonist navigating a whole menu of crises surrounded by a cast of genuine, vivid characters . . . The book occupies a small space but packs it to the brim with humanity." —Entertainment Weekly

"Elegant, droll. . .This meditation on the passing of youth is touching and ruefully funny." —Publishers Weekly

“King follows five critically acclaimed novels, most recently Euphoria and Writers & Lovers, with her first collection of short stories. Ann Patchett raved that the new offering ‘moved me, inspired me, thrilled me. It filled up ever chamber of my heart. I loved this book.’” —The Millions (“Most Anticipated: The Great Second-Half 2021 Book Preview”)

Library Journal

★ 09/01/2021

In "Creature," the opening story in King's (Writers & Lovers) dazzling new collection, 14-year-old Carol spends the summer nannying for a wealthy family in her New England beach town and becomes infatuated with the children's charming, insouciant young uncle. Like many characters in this collection, Carol has an alcohol-addicted parent and an unhappy home life. On the cusp of adulthood, trying out new identities, Carol is a stranger to herself, inhabiting an unfamiliar body. Similarly, "When in the Dordogne" features a lonely adolescent protagonist from a troubled family. He's been left at home by his inattentive parents in the care of two kind local college boys during a summer that becomes pivotal to his understanding of the world. Though the protagonists range from a young girl to a middle-aged gay man to a gruff nonagenarian grandfather, the stories share certain characteristics; King is a master at conveying through subtle description the small, painful, bumbling moments of life and the awkwardness of human interactions. In the title story, a touching and quiet tale of hope and connection, a repressed bookseller, the single parent to a gregarious 12-year-old daughter, falls in love with his employee. VERDICT A series of beautifully written character studies brimming with insight into the human condition.—Lauren Gilbert, Ctr. for Jewish History, New York

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2021-08-18
The first collection of stories from an acclaimed novelist.

King, who won the inaugural Kirkus Prize for Fiction for Euphoria (2014), can make you fall in love with a character fast, especially the smart, vulnerable, often painfully self-conscious adolescent protagonists featured in several of the 10 stories collected here, half previously published, half new. In "Creature," the fetching opener, 14-year-old Carol is hired to be a live-in mother's helper by a rich woman whose children and grandchildren are coming for a two-week visit, a woman so entitled she breezily renames her Cara because she likes it better. Under the influence of Jane Eyre, Carol is swept away by the charms of the woman's newly married son, who's arrived without his wife. "You cannot know these blistering feelings," she writes to her friend, "you have not yet met your Rochester." As in King's debut, Father of the Rain (2010), alcoholism and mental illness shadow many characters' lives. Carol has a father in rehab, while the unnamed boy narrator of "When in the Dordogne" has parents who have left for France following the father's nervous breakdown and failed suicide attempt. His babysitters are a pair of college boys with whom he has so much more fun than usual that he dreams that his parents will get in a car crash and never return. The protagonists of other stories show King's range, among them a gay man who receives a surprise visit from his homophobic college roommate, a Frenchwoman living in the U.S. whose husband has abruptly moved on, a German woman taking her bratty daughter on holiday to an unpromising inn on the North Sea, a 91-year-old visiting his young granddaughter in the hospital. The final story, "The Man at the Door," about frustrations of the writing process, also tells of its joys: "This morning, however, without warning, a sentence rose, a strange unexpected chain of words meeting the surface in one long gorgeous arc....Words flooded her and her hand ached to keep up with them and above it all her mind was singing here it is here it is and she was smiling."

Full of insights and pleasures.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177351704
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 11/09/2021
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 428,999
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