Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Barthelme, Donald - Barbara L. Roe (essay date 1992)
Barthelme, Donald - Barbara L. Roe (essay date 1992)
Barbara L. Roe (essay date 1992)
SOURCE: Roe, Barbara L. “Part 1: The Short Fiction.” In Donald Barthelme: The Short Fiction, pp. 3-93. New York: Twayne Publishers, 1992.
[In the following excerpt, Roe surveys Barthelme's later fiction and reflects on his legacy as a short fiction author.]
MORTAL VISIONS “VISITORS”
In 1981, when Barthelme turned 50, he seemed pleased with the view from this lookout. The years, he said, had tempered his anger over humanity's folly and taught him to “cherish” life more and more as there is “less and less time” (Brans, 131). The implications of mortality, however, preoccupy Barthelme's last decade of stories, as aging characters debate, deny, or crusade for their remaining prospects. Not surprisingly, gray often betokens their uncertain status. Depending on a character's perspective, for instance, gray hair is either the gloomy wreath of death or the respectable laurels of...
[The entire page is 6172 words long]
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Morris Dickstein (essay date 1977)
- Paul Bruss (essay date 1981)
- Lois Gordon (essay date 1981)
- Frank Burch Brown (review date 31 March 1982)
- Maurice Couturier and Regis Durand (essay date 1982)
- Larry McCaffery (essay date 1982)
- Charles Molesworth (essay date 1982)
- Wayne B. Stengel (essay date 1985)
- John Domini (essay date winter 1990)
- Charles Baxter (essay date autumn 1990)
- Ewing Campbell (essay date fall 1990)
- Stanley Trachtenberg (essay date 1990)
- Brian McHale and Moshe Ron (essay date summer 1991)
- Jerome Klinkowitz (essay date 1991)
- Barbara L. Roe (essay date 1992)
- Wayne B. Stengel (essay date 1992)
- Further Reading
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