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Pup! et cetera
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Pup! et cetera in Franklin, TN
Current price: $20.00

Barnes and Noble
Pup! et cetera in Franklin, TN
Current price: $20.00
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Size: OS
Derek Updegraff’s latest collection of fifteen short stories,
Pup! Et cetera
, continues his exploration of fictional characters whose lives are fascinating and completely unexpected. Take, for example, the wife who cartwheels and backflips in the living room or the two men in “Husky” who hug and sob and console one another. Consider the man who holds “a bag of ice between his hands because he’s the poor bastard who grabbed the hot potato.” There is, in this book, a pulse of familiarity in all the strangeness, something to cling to “as sirens rage louder and louder,” and “One walks to the door and says, ‘Come. Let’s make more rock piles instead.’”
Pup! Et cetera
, continues his exploration of fictional characters whose lives are fascinating and completely unexpected. Take, for example, the wife who cartwheels and backflips in the living room or the two men in “Husky” who hug and sob and console one another. Consider the man who holds “a bag of ice between his hands because he’s the poor bastard who grabbed the hot potato.” There is, in this book, a pulse of familiarity in all the strangeness, something to cling to “as sirens rage louder and louder,” and “One walks to the door and says, ‘Come. Let’s make more rock piles instead.’”
Derek Updegraff’s latest collection of fifteen short stories,
Pup! Et cetera
, continues his exploration of fictional characters whose lives are fascinating and completely unexpected. Take, for example, the wife who cartwheels and backflips in the living room or the two men in “Husky” who hug and sob and console one another. Consider the man who holds “a bag of ice between his hands because he’s the poor bastard who grabbed the hot potato.” There is, in this book, a pulse of familiarity in all the strangeness, something to cling to “as sirens rage louder and louder,” and “One walks to the door and says, ‘Come. Let’s make more rock piles instead.’”
Pup! Et cetera
, continues his exploration of fictional characters whose lives are fascinating and completely unexpected. Take, for example, the wife who cartwheels and backflips in the living room or the two men in “Husky” who hug and sob and console one another. Consider the man who holds “a bag of ice between his hands because he’s the poor bastard who grabbed the hot potato.” There is, in this book, a pulse of familiarity in all the strangeness, something to cling to “as sirens rage louder and louder,” and “One walks to the door and says, ‘Come. Let’s make more rock piles instead.’”