Like the difficult and necessary theological propositions embedded within the works of Flannery O’Connor and William Faulkner, Requiem suggests that perhaps, in the end, all we can do is see until we can’t anymore. Carmody’s darkly poignant illustration of this advocates that seeing — despite our fears, limitations, and distractions — may be one of love’s most sincere gestures.

~ American Book Review

Requiem

Requiem by Teresa Carmody is a “folk opera, a lament for the unexamined life,” writes editor and author David Ulin in his Introduction. In this short collection of fiction, a lonely man plainchants for the waitress he once stalked, a sonless father serenades a fatherless son, and a bereft family gathers to bury a parent, providing an aching chorus of what is left. Carmody uses Biblical language to pierce the callous and bruised souls of these lost, and sometimes found, small-town Michiganders. In her raw spare stories, novelist, essayist and poet Carol Muske-Dukes writes that Carmody creates “a voice out of the backyard burning bush, a Midwest scriptural mist: frank, fierce and fidgety, and most emphatically her own.”

This title is a second edition, released as part of punctum’s Special Collections project.

About the First Edition