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Work, and the coffee-fueled day-to-day grind, is the shared concern
of these stories, which have been chosen from among the hundreds
that have appeared in the prestigious Flannery O'Connor Award for
Short Fiction series. More than seventy volumes, which include
approximately eight hundred stories, have won the Flannery O'Connor
Award. This stunning trove of always engaging, often groundbreaking
short fiction is the common source for this anthology on work-and
for planned anthologies on such topics as family, gender and
sexuality, animals, and more. Sometimes work is rewarding, and
sometimes it's just demanding. From the cubicle to the courtroom,
from the stage to the station. These fifteen stories reflect upon
the time we dedicate to the jobs we do, from the moment we begin
our commute to the second we return home, and every hardworking
hour in between.
In the Hindu Kush Mountains that divide Afghanistan from Pakistan,
a new Islamic prophet plans the destruction of the Great Satan. The
prophet Khalid Ibn'abd Al-aziz Assaud reveals that Allah has shown
him the path to a new Islamic order. He intends to create a new
Islamic world by bringing the wrath of Allah down on the infidels
in ways they don't expect. Educated in the United States and
tempered in the wars of Afghanistan, Assaud knows America's
military strengths and its economic weaknesses. Americans' dreams
are kept alive with debt-if you destroy the banks of the Unites
States, you bring down the enemy. Dr. Ross Palmer, a decorated
Marine and noted economist, leads an elite unit of the Federal
Reserve. Formed to respond quickly to attacks on United States
financial institutions, the unit has worked only on
simulations-until now. The first attack by Assaud is aimed at the
world's oil supply. Assaud's second assault, a nationwide
cyber-attack on the credit system, proves much more difficult for
Dr. Palmer's team. In response to this final attack the Federal
Reserve is forced to close all of the nation's banks. Can that halt
the slide, or will America descend into another great depression?
Either way, life in the United States is about to change.
These stories offer layered, perceptive takes on what home means to
us. The people we meet in these stories are often traveling to and
from home-thinking about where they have come from, where they are
headed, and how that journey will impact their futures. Although
the stories approach homecoming and homesickness through varied
moods and styles, they all come around to confronting a shared
need: a place to call home.
These stories amount to something more than a celebration of the
holidays dotting our calendars from month to month. Even though
holidays can occasion a return to the familiar, these stories
challenge traditional associations. Each story serves to complicate
how we observe the human observation of holidays and offers a
nuanced understanding of related themes such as family and
motherhood, travel, grief and mourning processes, and memory. More
generally, holidays are days of observance, and that aspect alone
offers a lot to unpack.
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