Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Dybek, Stuart - Kirkus Reviews (review date 1 November 1979)

Dybek, Stuart - Kirkus Reviews (review date 1 November 1979)

Kirkus Reviews (review date 1 November 1979)

SOURCE: “Fiction.” Kirkus Reviews 47, no. 21 (1 November 1979): 1278.

[In the following review, the critic admires the story “The Apprentice” from Childhood and Other Neighborhoods, but unfavorably reviews the collection itself.]

Stories and sketches, verismo chunks of muscular Chicago reality: boys bringing a dying immigrant grandmother a jar of outlawed duck's blood soup; tales of ragmen; teenage car escapades; adolescent artists-in-bud; the “basic principle of Catholic education—the Double Reverse: 1) suspect what they teach you; 2) study what they condemn.” Set mostly in poor milieus, Polish or black or Puerto Rican, the sketches generally have a lurid effectiveness just a step or two beyond total believability. But all of Dybek's range and flair works together in the final story, “The Apprentice,” in which a truant boy courses through...

[The entire page is 253 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: