Submitted by Valuable-Elevator511 t3_z5xoxl in books
I'm not particularly intelligent so I was wondering if anybody could explain to me what is so brilliant about Raymond Carver. The last few years I just have stopped reading altogether so my brain just isn't wired right. but I was just reading some short stories from Raymond Carver (specifically one called 'viewfinder' in the collection called 'what we talk about when we talk about love') and I was just amazed at how compelling it was in so few pages. They're very short, fairly innocuous stories of the gentle, sometimes hinted eccentricity of American suburbia but I just couldn't explain to myself what exactly it was or why it affected me so much. Maybe somebody with a better understanding or literacy depth can explain to me why it works so well
JoyousDiversion t1_ixyg6nl wrote
I absolutely love Carver. I know exactly what you mean. He seems to have this skill where every description, every conversation is distilled to its essence. At the same time, the things that aren’t said are just as important. Obviously he has a minimalist kind of style and tends to focus on blue collar subjects but I think how you describe him is perfect. He just gets an awful lot of out brevity.