Dr. Terry Dalrymple of the English faculty at Angelo State University has published a book of short fiction titled “Love Stories (Sort Of),” through Lamar University Press.
Released in March, “Love Stories (Sort Of)” requires a parenthetical explanation in the title because these stories are not chivalric romances. They vividly illustrate real people ̶ whether children, adolescents or adults ̶ in love. The characters in this assemblage get by as best they can in often humorous and always poignant ways. Among the characters are an idealistic 11-year-old with a gift for pencil drawing and a crush on his teacher, a 47-year-old real estate agent looking for another ego-bolstering bedpost notch, and a beautiful, lonely young woman whose only knowledge of love comes from classical literature and her mother’s dire warnings about nasty things boys seek.
A 35-year ASU faculty member, Dalrymple holds the John S. Cargile University Professorship and teaches creative writing and literature. His other works of fiction include “Salvation,” a short story collection; “Fishing for Trouble,” a novel for middle readers; and “Texas 5X5: Twenty-Five Stories by Five Texas Writers,” which he co-authored. His stories have been published in dozens of journals and anthologies, and he is the editor of “Texas Soundtrack: Texas Stories Inspired by Texas Music.”
“Love Stories (Sort Of)” is available through Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other book stores, as well as through Lamar University Press at www.lamaruniversitypress.org.
Comments
He was always one of my favorite professors. I look forward to reading this.
- Log in or register to post comments
PermalinkBlah blah blah. No one wants to hear about some adolescent crush some naïve green reporter harbored on the would-be sheriff of some podunk town - or whatever it was that this Lifetime movie was about. I prefer my dramas in foreign languages and punctuated by intersex violence, where everyone is in tight clothing, peasant men are forced to sleep with their bosses wives, and secretaries are pined after in secret by anguished millionaires in their tequila distilleries.
- Log in or register to post comments
PermalinkPost a comment to this article here: