Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Cathedral Carver, Raymond - Eugene Goodheart (essay date 1987)
Cathedral Carver, Raymond - Eugene Goodheart (essay date 1987)
Eugene Goodheart (essay date 1987)
SOURCE: "Raymond Carver's Cathedral," in Pieces of Resistance, Cambridge University Press, 1987, pp. 162-66.
[In the following essay, Goodheart analyzes Carver's moral code, arguing that he is at his best when his characters adhere to it.]
The affectless narrative voice of a Raymond Carver story defends itself against surprise or shock or pain. The most banal situations propose inexplicable signs of menace that require, in response, a discipline of unemotional terseness. Nothing much happens at the dinner party in "Feathers," the first of the stories in Carver's latest collection, except for the weird appearance of a vulture-sized peacock, which stares at the guests and to which Jack, the narrator, responds at intervals with three "god damns," as if the word were a talisman for preserving equanimity. The peacock, the plaster cast of misshapen teeth on top of the TV, the very ugly baby of the hosts...
[The entire page is 1952 words long]
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Criticism
- Paul Gray (review date 19 September 1983)
- Joseph G. Knapp (review date 31 December 1983)
- James W. Grinnell (review date Winter 1984)
- Patricia Schnapp (review date Summer 1985)
- Mark A. R. Facknitz (essay date Summer 1986)
- Eugene Goodheart (essay date 1987)
- Keith Cushman (essay date 1988)
- Arthur M. Saltzman (essay date 1988)
- Adam Meyer (essay date Summer 1989)
- Michael Wm. Gearhart (essay date Fall 1989)
- Arthur A. Brown (essay date Winter 1990)
- Nelson Hathcock (essay date Winter 1991)
- Ewing Campbell (essay date 1992)
- Randolph Paul Runyon (essay date 1992)
- Kirk Nesset (essay date Spring 1994)
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