Titles Alpha by Author

The House of Your Dream, Robert Alexander & Dennis Maloney, eds., 2008

Traffic, Jack Anderson, 1998

Reaching Out to the World, Robert Bly, 2009

Pretty, Kim Chinquee, 2010

All of Us, Elisabeth Frost, 2011

Magdalena, Maureen Gibbon, 2007

Your Sun, Manny, Marie Harris, 1999

Angles of Approach, Holly Iglesias, 2010

Light From An Eclipse, Nancy Lagomarsino, 2005

Moments Without Names, Morton Marcus, 2002

Whatever Shines, Kathleen McGookey, 2001

Northern Latitudes, Lawrence Millman, 2000

A Handbook for Writers, Vern Rutsala, 2004

The Angel of Duluth, Madelon Sprengnether, 2006

The Blue Dress, Alison Townsend, 2003

The Marie Alexander Poetry Series




Pretty

by Kim Chinquee

2010
Pages: 96
ISBN (Trade paper):
978-1-935210-13-9
$16.00

Read an excerpt
(pdf file)

• Purchase from
White Pine Press:

"These brief snapshots of conversations in specific settings manage to seem not like fragments of lost wholes but like vivid distillations of essential dramas, each a variation on the shared subject of thwarted intimacy. Though each snapshot is complete in itself, the book gathers mass and momentum, and so achieves a singular power."
—Carl Dennis

About the Author

Kim Chinquee grew up on a dairy farm in Wisconsin. She served as a medical lab tech in the Air Force, and was stationed in Mississippi, Texas, England, Germany and North Dakota. She received her M.A. in creative writing from the University of Southern Mississippi's Center for Writers, her M.F.A. from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and she is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize and a Henfield Prize. She is the author of the collections Oh Baby and Pretty, and her work has appeared in journals and anthologies including The Nation, NOON, The Huffington Post, Conjunctions, Willow Springs, Denver Quarterly, Notre Dame Review, American Short Fiction, Green Mountains Review, New York Tyrant, Fiction, Mississippi Review, and several others. She lives in Buffalo, New York, where she teaches creative writing.

Accolades

"In her new book of very short stories, Kim Chinquee works the flash fiction form in much the same way that Raymond Carver worked somewhat longer story forms: with a stunningly complex simplicity. There is always a roiling subtext beneath the seemingly placid surfaces and tones of Chinquee's stories, a dichotomy which speaks to deep truths about the human condition. Kim Chinquee is a true artist with a true vision, and Pretty is a brilliant book."
—Robert Olen Butler

"Kim Chinquee writes with remarkable heart and grace. Her wise capsulizings of love's devastations and of life's roil and disappointments come at you with a sorrowing precision that comforts even as it haunts."
—Gary Lutz

"In her new collection of prose poems/flash fictions, Pretty, Kim Chinquee peels back the surface layers of human experience, giving her readers poignant glimpses of a girl struggling with identity, longing, and unrequited love. But these are not the fanciful farces we were fed as young girls; the lessons Chinquee's character Elle learns as she grows from a young girl to maturity are raw, candid, and unapologetic....her stories leave us with questions such as: What constitutes truth? How do the roles we play influence others? In what ways do we sabotage ourselves? And that's what good writing should do—leave us wondering, experiencing, and discovering again and again."
—Julie Colombo, Rain Taxi

"...the book as a whole moves toward becoming a major work of art. If the individual flashes don't always come to more then a premonition, together they can take on a haunting wholeness—call it a gestalt. This is something I found lacking in another collection I read recently, Elizabeth Strout's Pulitzer-winning Olive Kitteredge (2008), a novel in stories, Strout's prose, like Moore's, is richly textured, and her novelistic approach to stories is expansive: yet, in terms of their protagonists, neither of their books is more various, or deeper, than Chinquee's Pretty. In fact, I dare say they are less so. Strout or Moore may tell you everything you want to know about a character, but also more than you want to know; Chinquee tells you less, and leaves you desiring."
—Robert Shapard, American Book Review

"Once asked why he kept making small films in terms of characters and length—chamber pieces for lack of a better word—Ingmar Bergman quoted Frederic Chopin's answer to a woman who asked why he concentrated more on sonatas and concertos instead of that grand, opulent form—the symphony: 'My kingdom is a small one, but I am its king.' People have voiced similar concerns about flash fiction or very short fiction or any of the other diminutives for the form that currently saturates the internet. In the spirit of her Northern European brothers I offer Kim Chinquee as the answer—the queen of flash fiction—and her most recent collection, Pretty. In curt sentences detailing many unsettled lives, Chinquee constructs a mosaic of despair in modern day America."
—Greg Gerke, The Rumpus



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