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This critically acclaimed collection of very short stories about
postwar Buffalo, New York - illustrated in colour with the author's
own collages - is now available in paperback. It all began in
Buffalo between World War II and the Korean Conflict, as it was
called, when the guys would meet up late at night in a diner for
their brand of fellowship. They were mostly high school graduates
in their late teens and early twenties, the sons of immigrant
families. It didn't matter; there was little trace of that showing.
They didn't look or act alike, but they had a sense of who they
were, sort of proud for some reason, without much to show for it.
From the introduction, at the centre of the group was Arnie. He
might have been selling real estate for the time being, but he
always had his eye on the next thing - Christmas tree farming,
perhaps, or uranium mining. Then there were Moe, who had a gas
station and garage, and Barney, who drove a truck for Pop's Pies.
Observing it all was an art student working odd jobs to afford his
paints and brushes - Phil. In 110 vignettes about Arnie and the
guys, Philip Sultz presents a fictionalised portrait of the
working-class Buffalo of his youth. He also vividly sketches the
downtown Manhattan of those days, where his protagonists are drawn
to study and to work. These stories - by turns funny and poignant,
perfectly told and full of telling details - evoke not only the
life of two cities, but the atmosphere of postwar America. Even in
shadow of McCarthyism and the atom bomb, it was a time emblematic
of possibility and change. Lake Effect Days is illustrated with
colour reproductions of Sultz's critically acclaimed collages,
which echo the text in their formal perfection and add new layers
of allusion.
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