Ghost Traps

Stories

Title Details

Pages: 168

Trim size: 5.500in x 8.500in

Formats

Paperback

Pub Date: 03/01/2013

ISBN: 9-780-8203-4491-1

List Price: $22.95

eBook

Pub Date: 03/01/2013

ISBN: 9-780-8203-4574-1

List Price: $22.95

Ghost Traps

Stories

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  • Description
  • Reviews

Ghost Traps is a collection of twelve stories about characters who are on the edge and under duress, individuals backed against a wall as they try to free themselves from their own limitations, habits, and destructive desires.

In the title story, Harper learns to fish from a man whose son is “catching hell” in the Korean War. When the son returns, he begins stealing lobsters from Harper’s traps, and Harper, out of a sense of obligation and guilt, teaches him to fish, vainly hoping it will help the man put together the pieces of a life that war shattered. In “The Connoisseur,” a wealthy collector on an archeological dig in the Himalayan foothills realizes he “knows how to stay out of jail, charge rent, build hotels, and pass Go,” but has not spiritual life. Unlike his guide, a Sherpa, who could remain content with nothing but the Himalayas, the collector finds himself wanting in all but material success.

Whether they win or lose, Robert Abel’s characters make the best of circumstance with creativity, wit, passion, and endurance. In “Lawless in New York,” Professor Alice Reinquist, the sole woman in her university’s delegation to an academic conference, maintains her sense of humor by thinking of Wonder Woman’s Gold Lasso, which makes “even the most cunning of evildoers unable to prevaricate.” Tracey Wynn, a woman who considers herself on loan to her aloof boyfriend, keeps her options open by always leaving a portion of her neck exposed because she “cannot stand being closed in by anything and because she knows it invites at least a fantasy kiss.” In “Appetizer,” a man fishing in Alaska resourcefully asks two hungry grizzly bears, “How much love can $600 worth of salmon buy?”

Although many of these characters inhabit a world in which the bottom is about to fall out, they invariably find good reason—and courage—to take the next treacherous step. From the salty waters of Cape Cod Canal to the mountains of Tibet; from a Puerto Rican pub to an elegant New York bar where “Susan Sontag and Norman Mailer had no doubt insulted each other,” Ghost Traps is filled with people hustling for survival and fighting for identity in a world reluctant to give anyone an even break.

Abel holds the reader’s attention with the pacing of a seasoned raconteur. . . . The characters in all of these stories are distinguished by an ability to persevere in the face of potential chaos. Abel is a tremendously skilled writer and a first-rate storyteller in the timeless tradition of John Hersey.

Publishers Weekly

Most of Abel’s characters go about their ordinary lives until a sudden, random event makes them pause and, in a startling burst of clarity, realize how perilously close to disaster they are. Abel’s ironic style and wit threads through and connects these twelve diverse tales.

Library Journal

Abel’s stories are about the joyous unpredictability of life. His characters are ordinary people in slightly extraordinary circumstances, but he looks at them so generously that everything crackles with meaning.

American Libraries

Abel's stories are about the joyous unpredictability of life. His prose is so energetic and direct that anything seems possible, and everything seems new. . . . This is a beguiling collection of stories by an ardent realist.

Booklist

Reading Ghost Traps is like wading behind a masterly guide as he fishes some turbulent and exotic waters. . . . Mr. Abel displays an astonishing breadth.

New York Times Book Review

About the Author/Editor

ROBERT ABEL (1941-2017) was the author of Full-tilt Boogie; The Progress of a Fire; Freedom Dues, or, A Gentleman's Progress in the New World; and Skin and Bones. His stories have appeared in Playgirl, Contact, and Denver Quarterly.