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A Gate at the Stairs

A Gate at the Stairs is a novel by American fiction writer Lorrie Moore. It was published by Random House in 2009. The novel won Amazon.com's "best of the month" designation[1] and was a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award and the Orange Prize for Fiction.[2]

A Gate at the Stairs
AuthorLorrie Moore
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreFiction
Published2009 (Random House)
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages322
ISBN978-0-375-70846-6
OCLC347878482
813.54
LC ClassPS3563.O6225

Plot summary edit

The novel's main character is Tassie Keltjin. At age 20, Keltjin is attending a major university identified only as the "Athens of the Midwest." When the novel opens, she is looking for a job as a nanny. With no real childcare experience, she finds that the only mother willing to hire her is Sarah Brink. The hitch is that Sarah does not yet actually have a child. This doesn't stop her from hiring Keltjin anyway. Soon Tassie finds herself embroiled in the Brink family's attempts to adopt a biracial child who eventually goes by the name "Emmie".[3]

Now a college student and a nanny, Tassie starts a relationship with a man named Reynaldo whom she met in one of her classes. Reynaldo tells her that he is Brazilian.[4] She thinks it's odd that when he purports to use Portuguese, he actually speaks Spanish. Later, Reynaldo ends the affair, informing her that he is suspected of terrorist activities and must disappear.[5] In saying goodbye, Reynaldo tells her he is not actually Brazilian. When she asks where he is from, he answers "Hoboken, New Jersey." Though Reynaldo denies being part of a cell he says that "It is not the jihad that is the wrong thing. It is the wrong things that are the wrong things" and then he quotes Muhammed.[6]

Following a fostering period of several months, during which the Brinks and Tassie bond closely with the child, the adoption proceedings go awry when it is discovered that the Brinks lost their biological child many years earlier in a bizarre highway accident. It emerges that Edward punished his four-year-old son for misbehavior by making him get out of the car at a highway rest stop. The distraught boy then walked onto the highway, where he was killed by an oncoming vehicle. Tassie mourns the loss of Emmie who is taken back into foster care.

Within a few weeks, she is also mourning the death of her brother Robert. Having failed to succeed academically and be accepted to a four-year college, Robert enlists in the United States Army and attends boot camp at Fort Bliss. He is killed in Afghanistan almost immediately after boot camp. Tassie blames herself for his death when she discovers, amidst her email, an unread note from him asking for her advice on whether to enlist. The Keltjins are further devastated when the army issues multiple and conflicting accounts of how Robert died. Tassie spends a medical leave of absence from school recovering at her parents' small farm, but she returns to college in November of the next academic year.

The novel closes on a telephone call in which Sara Brink's husband Edward tells Tassie that he and his wife have split up. He then invites Tassie to have dinner with him. Tassie addresses the reader directly, saying she declined to meet him even for a cup of coffee[7] and the novel ends on the words, "That much I learned in college."[8]

There are multiple theories about the meaning of the book's title. Michael Gorra writes that it refers to the child safety gates that people put at the top of staircases to keep children from toppling down the stairs.[9] Michiko Kakutani, on the other hand, believes the book's title refers to a song Tassie wrote which includes the lyric "I’d climb up that staircase/past lions and bears,/but it’s locked/at the foot of the stairs."[10] However, there is also a gate at the front of the Brink house that takes on symbolic significance as Tassie first approaches the house. The gate is slightly off its hinges, and Tassie notes mentally "it should have communicated itself as something else: someone’s ill-disguised decrepitude, items not cared for properly but fixed repeatedly in a make-do fashion, needful things having gotten away from their caregiver."[11]

Composition and publication history edit

Since 1984, Lorrie Moore has been teaching literature and writing at the University of Wisconsin at Madison where she holds the Delmore Schwartz Professorship in the Humanities.[12] It's tempting to extrapolate that Moore has drawn heavily on her experiences with college students in creating Tassie Keltjin. However Moore generally rejects the idea that her work is ever at all autobiographical: “I don’t have an interesting enough life for a memoir—unless I get to fudge and exaggerate and lie. But then that’s fiction. As for personal exposure in fiction, well, sure. One has to be brave. There is always a little personal exposure ... and more than that there is the illusion of personal exposure, which may have the same annoying repercussions,” she said in a 2005 interview with The Believer Magazine.[13] In the same interview, Moore declined to discuss her upcoming novel. But she did comment: “everything is political, and I am interested in power and powerlessness as it relates to people in various ways. I’m also interested in the way that the workings of governments and elected officials intrude upon the lives and minds of people who feel generally safe from the immediate effects of such workings”[12] which has obvious applications to the military recruitment and death of the novel's Robert Keltjin and his family's inability to get a straight answer from the army about how he died. Telegraph Writer Helena de Bertodano notes that Moore's own adopted son is African American[14] which mirrors the attempted adoption of Emmie by the white Brink family in the novel. In the same Telegraph article, Moore states “'I wanted to describe what it is like to be a white person raising an African-American in this country. People look at you a little differently; you seem to be part of a different history.”[14] In her novel, an unidentified white parent of an African-American child says, “Do you get those looks in the aisles when you’re with your kid? That look that says I see you’ve been messing around with colored people—we hope you’re paying cash”.[15] In the same article, de Bertodano notes that Moore's short story “People Like That Are the Only People Here: Canonical Babbling in Peed Onk” is also based on Moore's son's battle with cancer as a baby. In an interview she gave for Elle, Moore also admitted that the French restaurant in her novel was based in part on L’Etoile, a French restaurant in Madison, Wisconsin to which she sometimes takes her students for celebrations.[16]

Critical reception edit

A Gate at the Stairs has been recognized throughout the English-speaking world, garnering reviews in Canadian, Australian, and British[17] publications as well as American. The Sydney Morning Herald declared it amongst 2009's "most highly anticipated novels" [18] and Herald reviewer Kevin Rabalais compared Moore's writing to that of Mark Twain, Alice Munro, and William Trevor.[18] The New York Times (NYT) reviewed the novel twice. NYT reviewer Michiko Kakutani praised Moore's development of the main character and, in particular, the novelist's exploration of "the limitations and insufficiencies of love, and the loneliness that haunts even the most doting of families."[19] Two days later, The New York Times writer Jonathan Lethem offered the novel's author this reluctant praise: "She's a discomfiting, sometimes even rageful writer, lurking in the disguise of an endearing one."[20] London Sunday Times reviewer Sophie Harrison heaped accolades on the novel, for the most part, finding it "unflaggingly tender and smart." Harrison noted, however, that the extreme quirkiness of the main character sometimes "limits the novel": "the quirkiness stifles deeper emotions and makes grief almost kitsch."[17] Bookmarks Magazine says Moore's writing “occasionally suffers from its own excess” while less than believable characters and plotting are accompanied by “an overabundance of flat jokes and too-clever puns” (quoted on Amazon.com).[1] The Toronto Sun review notes that the novel captures post–September 11, 2001 anxiety: "It takes place in a post 9/11 American world against which anger and paranoia, race and religion vie with the demands of everyday life. The self-doubt of the novel's protagonist echoes the self-doubt of a nation which had considered itself invulnerable."[21]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Amazon.com: A Gate at the Stairs - Editorial Reviews". Amazon. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
  2. ^ “Bring Lorrie Moore’s award-winning new novel to your reading group!” Knopfdoubleday Publishers Group. 31 January 2011. http://reading-group-center.knopfdoubleday.com/2010/08/26/bring-lorrie-moores-award-winning-new-novel-to-your-reading-group/
  3. ^ Moore, Lorrie. A Gate at the Stairs. New York: Random House, 2009. 3-127
  4. ^ Moore, Lorrie. A Gate at the Stairs. New York: Random House, 2010. 142-167.
  5. ^ Moore, Lorrie. A Gate at the Stairs. New York: Random House, 2010. 205.
  6. ^ Moore, Lorrie. A Gate at the Stairs. New York: Random House, 2010. 206.
  7. ^ Moore, Lorrie. A Gate at the Stairs. New York: Random House, 2009. 127-321
  8. ^ Moore, Lorrie. A Gate at the Stairs. New York: Random House, 2009. 322
  9. ^ Gorra, Michael. “Farmer’s Daughter: Lorrie Moore’s narrator is a young woman fresh from the heartland.” Bookforum. Autumn 2009. http://www.bookforum.com/inprint/016_03/4370
  10. ^ Kakutani, Michiko (2009-08-27). "First Time for Taxis, Lo Mein and Loss". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-02-10.
  11. ^ Moore, Lorrie. A Gate at the Stairs. New York: Random House, 2010. 10.
  12. ^ a b “Lorrie Moore: Writer and Professor.” Pneuman, Angela . Believer Magazine. October 2005. 14 March 2011. http://www.believermag.com/issues/200510/?read=interview_moore.
  13. ^ “Lorrie Moore: Writer and Professor.” Pneuman, Angela . Believer Magazine. October 2005. 14 March 2011. http://www.believermag.com/issues/200510/?read=interview_moore.
  14. ^ a b "Lorrie Moore interview". www.telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 2023-06-29.
  15. ^ Moore, Lorrie. A Gate at the Stairs. New York: Random House, 2009.195.
  16. ^ “Lorrie Moore: The lowdown on the author's life, loves, and first new book in 11 years.” 14 March 2011. . Archived from the original on 2011-07-10. Retrieved 2011-03-16.
  17. ^ a b Harrison, Sophie. “Cold comfort on the farm; Lorrie Moore's first novel for 15 years is a poignant story of a mercurial Midwestern twentysomething yearning to broaden her intellectual horizons.” The Sunday Times. 4 October 2009. Edition 1. National Edition. 25 February 2011. Retrieved through Lexis Nexis.
  18. ^ a b Rabelais, Kevin. "Welcome to the real world: FICTION." Sydney Morning Herald 24 October 2009. n. pag. Lexis Nexis. Database. 21 February 2011.
  19. ^ Kakutani, Michiko. "First Time for Taxis, Lo Mein And Loss." The New York Times 28 August 2009. n. pag. Lexis Nexis. Database. 21 February 2011.
  20. ^ Lethem, Jonathan. "EyesWide Open." The New York Times 30 August 2009. n. pag. Lexis Nexis. Database. 21 February 2011.
  21. ^ Schiefer, Nancy. "Girl, Interrupted." Toronto Sun. 15 November 2009. 7 February 2011. 70.

External links edit

  • George Dyers, “A Gate at the Stairs by Lorrie Moore”, The Observer, 27 September 2009.

gate, stairs, novel, american, fiction, writer, lorrie, moore, published, random, house, 2009, novel, amazon, best, month, designation, finalist, faulkner, award, orange, prize, fiction, authorlorrie, moorecountryunited, stateslanguageenglishgenrefictionpublis. A Gate at the Stairs is a novel by American fiction writer Lorrie Moore It was published by Random House in 2009 The novel won Amazon com s best of the month designation 1 and was a finalist for the PEN Faulkner Award and the Orange Prize for Fiction 2 A Gate at the StairsAuthorLorrie MooreCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreFictionPublished2009 Random House Media typePrint hardback amp paperback Pages322ISBN978 0 375 70846 6OCLC347878482Dewey Decimal813 54LC ClassPS3563 O6225 Contents 1 Plot summary 2 Composition and publication history 3 Critical reception 4 References 5 External linksPlot summary editThe novel s main character is Tassie Keltjin At age 20 Keltjin is attending a major university identified only as the Athens of the Midwest When the novel opens she is looking for a job as a nanny With no real childcare experience she finds that the only mother willing to hire her is Sarah Brink The hitch is that Sarah does not yet actually have a child This doesn t stop her from hiring Keltjin anyway Soon Tassie finds herself embroiled in the Brink family s attempts to adopt a biracial child who eventually goes by the name Emmie 3 Now a college student and a nanny Tassie starts a relationship with a man named Reynaldo whom she met in one of her classes Reynaldo tells her that he is Brazilian 4 She thinks it s odd that when he purports to use Portuguese he actually speaks Spanish Later Reynaldo ends the affair informing her that he is suspected of terrorist activities and must disappear 5 In saying goodbye Reynaldo tells her he is not actually Brazilian When she asks where he is from he answers Hoboken New Jersey Though Reynaldo denies being part of a cell he says that It is not the jihad that is the wrong thing It is the wrong things that are the wrong things and then he quotes Muhammed 6 Following a fostering period of several months during which the Brinks and Tassie bond closely with the child the adoption proceedings go awry when it is discovered that the Brinks lost their biological child many years earlier in a bizarre highway accident It emerges that Edward punished his four year old son for misbehavior by making him get out of the car at a highway rest stop The distraught boy then walked onto the highway where he was killed by an oncoming vehicle Tassie mourns the loss of Emmie who is taken back into foster care Within a few weeks she is also mourning the death of her brother Robert Having failed to succeed academically and be accepted to a four year college Robert enlists in the United States Army and attends boot camp at Fort Bliss He is killed in Afghanistan almost immediately after boot camp Tassie blames herself for his death when she discovers amidst her email an unread note from him asking for her advice on whether to enlist The Keltjins are further devastated when the army issues multiple and conflicting accounts of how Robert died Tassie spends a medical leave of absence from school recovering at her parents small farm but she returns to college in November of the next academic year The novel closes on a telephone call in which Sara Brink s husband Edward tells Tassie that he and his wife have split up He then invites Tassie to have dinner with him Tassie addresses the reader directly saying she declined to meet him even for a cup of coffee 7 and the novel ends on the words That much I learned in college 8 There are multiple theories about the meaning of the book s title Michael Gorra writes that it refers to the child safety gates that people put at the top of staircases to keep children from toppling down the stairs 9 Michiko Kakutani on the other hand believes the book s title refers to a song Tassie wrote which includes the lyric I d climb up that staircase past lions and bears but it s locked at the foot of the stairs 10 However there is also a gate at the front of the Brink house that takes on symbolic significance as Tassie first approaches the house The gate is slightly off its hinges and Tassie notes mentally it should have communicated itself as something else someone s ill disguised decrepitude items not cared for properly but fixed repeatedly in a make do fashion needful things having gotten away from their caregiver 11 Composition and publication history editSince 1984 Lorrie Moore has been teaching literature and writing at the University of Wisconsin at Madison where she holds the Delmore Schwartz Professorship in the Humanities 12 It s tempting to extrapolate that Moore has drawn heavily on her experiences with college students in creating Tassie Keltjin However Moore generally rejects the idea that her work is ever at all autobiographical I don t have an interesting enough life for a memoir unless I get to fudge and exaggerate and lie But then that s fiction As for personal exposure in fiction well sure One has to be brave There is always a little personal exposure and more than that there is the illusion of personal exposure which may have the same annoying repercussions she said in a 2005 interview with The Believer Magazine 13 In the same interview Moore declined to discuss her upcoming novel But she did comment everything is political and I am interested in power and powerlessness as it relates to people in various ways I m also interested in the way that the workings of governments and elected officials intrude upon the lives and minds of people who feel generally safe from the immediate effects of such workings 12 which has obvious applications to the military recruitment and death of the novel s Robert Keltjin and his family s inability to get a straight answer from the army about how he died Telegraph Writer Helena de Bertodano notes that Moore s own adopted son is African American 14 which mirrors the attempted adoption of Emmie by the white Brink family in the novel In the same Telegraph article Moore states I wanted to describe what it is like to be a white person raising an African American in this country People look at you a little differently you seem to be part of a different history 14 In her novel an unidentified white parent of an African American child says Do you get those looks in the aisles when you re with your kid That look that says I see you ve been messing around with colored people we hope you re paying cash 15 In the same article de Bertodano notes that Moore s short story People Like That Are the Only People Here Canonical Babbling in Peed Onk is also based on Moore s son s battle with cancer as a baby In an interview she gave for Elle Moore also admitted that the French restaurant in her novel was based in part on L Etoile a French restaurant in Madison Wisconsin to which she sometimes takes her students for celebrations 16 Critical reception editA Gate at the Stairs has been recognized throughout the English speaking world garnering reviews in Canadian Australian and British 17 publications as well as American The Sydney Morning Herald declared it amongst 2009 s most highly anticipated novels 18 and Herald reviewer Kevin Rabalais compared Moore s writing to that of Mark Twain Alice Munro and William Trevor 18 The New York Times NYT reviewed the novel twice NYT reviewer Michiko Kakutani praised Moore s development of the main character and in particular the novelist s exploration of the limitations and insufficiencies of love and the loneliness that haunts even the most doting of families 19 Two days later The New York Times writer Jonathan Lethem offered the novel s author this reluctant praise She s a discomfiting sometimes even rageful writer lurking in the disguise of an endearing one 20 London Sunday Times reviewer Sophie Harrison heaped accolades on the novel for the most part finding it unflaggingly tender and smart Harrison noted however that the extreme quirkiness of the main character sometimes limits the novel the quirkiness stifles deeper emotions and makes grief almost kitsch 17 Bookmarks Magazine says Moore s writing occasionally suffers from its own excess while less than believable characters and plotting are accompanied by an overabundance of flat jokes and too clever puns quoted on Amazon com 1 The Toronto Sun review notes that the novel captures post September 11 2001 anxiety It takes place in a post 9 11 American world against which anger and paranoia race and religion vie with the demands of everyday life The self doubt of the novel s protagonist echoes the self doubt of a nation which had considered itself invulnerable 21 References edit a b Amazon com A Gate at the Stairs Editorial Reviews Amazon Retrieved 19 February 2011 Bring Lorrie Moore s award winning new novel to your reading group Knopfdoubleday Publishers Group 31 January 2011 http reading group center knopfdoubleday com 2010 08 26 bring lorrie moores award winning new novel to your reading group Moore Lorrie A Gate at the Stairs New York Random House 2009 3 127 Moore Lorrie A Gate at the Stairs New York Random House 2010 142 167 Moore Lorrie A Gate at the Stairs New York Random House 2010 205 Moore Lorrie A Gate at the Stairs New York Random House 2010 206 Moore Lorrie A Gate at the Stairs New York Random House 2009 127 321 Moore Lorrie A Gate at the Stairs New York Random House 2009 322 Gorra Michael Farmer s Daughter Lorrie Moore s narrator is a young woman fresh from the heartland Bookforum Autumn 2009 http www bookforum com inprint 016 03 4370 Kakutani Michiko 2009 08 27 First Time for Taxis Lo Mein and Loss The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 02 10 Moore Lorrie A Gate at the Stairs New York Random House 2010 10 a b Lorrie Moore Writer and Professor Pneuman Angela Believer Magazine October 2005 14 March 2011 http www believermag com issues 200510 read interview moore Lorrie Moore Writer and Professor Pneuman Angela Believer Magazine October 2005 14 March 2011 http www believermag com issues 200510 read interview moore a b Lorrie Moore interview www telegraph co uk Retrieved 2023 06 29 Moore Lorrie A Gate at the Stairs New York Random House 2009 195 Lorrie Moore The lowdown on the author s life loves and first new book in 11 years 14 March 2011 Interview with Lorrie Moore Archived from the original on 2011 07 10 Retrieved 2011 03 16 a b Harrison Sophie Cold comfort on the farm Lorrie Moore s first novel for 15 years is a poignant story of a mercurial Midwestern twentysomething yearning to broaden her intellectual horizons The Sunday Times 4 October 2009 Edition 1 National Edition 25 February 2011 Retrieved through Lexis Nexis a b Rabelais Kevin Welcome to the real world FICTION Sydney Morning Herald 24 October 2009 n pag Lexis Nexis Database 21 February 2011 Kakutani Michiko First Time for Taxis Lo Mein And Loss The New York Times 28 August 2009 n pag Lexis Nexis Database 21 February 2011 Lethem Jonathan EyesWide Open The New York Times 30 August 2009 n pag Lexis Nexis Database 21 February 2011 Schiefer Nancy Girl Interrupted Toronto Sun 15 November 2009 7 February 2011 70 External links editGeorge Dyers A Gate at the Stairs by Lorrie Moore The Observer 27 September 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Gate at the Stairs amp oldid 1162449867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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