Some Things Are Better Left to Saxophones

by June Seese


Formats

Softcover
$10.95
Hardcover
$20.95
Softcover
$10.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 7/31/2007

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 120
ISBN : 9780595446612
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 120
ISBN : 9780595690800

About the Book

"The fact is, June Akers Seese refuses to lie. When her eye lights on something, she arrests it with a photographic infallibility that is simply breathtaking. She writes Hemingway's best declarative sentence through the lens of Kafka and the searing elegance of Joan Didion. Yet, on top of everything, she manages to be very, very funny-often excruciatingly so. Some Things Are Better Left to Saxophones, her latest novel, embodies vintage Seese and her all-too-human, all-too-like-us, unforgiving domestic landscape: inside our houses, insides our heads, inside our hearts."

-Joseph Bathanti, Professor of Creative Writing and Co-Director of the Visiting Writers Series at Appalachian State University

In this novel, June Akers Seese writes of two retired Detroit teachers and their retarded daughter, Melody, who lives with them and works at a downtown hotel folding napkins and polishing tabletops. Melody's sisters and brother have moved on. One sister to Japan to study languages and literature; another to a boarding house on the Wayne State University campus where she collects Master's degrees that go nowhere and earns her living as a sometimes waitress. Their brother has fled to Alaska where land is cheap and his carpentry skills valued. All approaching 40, these offspring have no plans to marry or return home. They are all trapped in a dream of escaping the responsibility of Melody when their parents die.


About the Author

Recipient of a 200l Yaddo Writers? Fellowship, June Akers Seese is the author of two novels, What Waiting Really Means and Is This What Other Women Feel Too? plus a collection of short fiction, James Mason and the Walk-In Closet. Her previous publisher, Dalkey Archive Press, is located at the University of Illinois in Champaign.