ANew York TimesNotable Book of the Year
In eleven raucous, touching stories, Tim Gautreaux'sWelding with Childrentraces the course of sin and redemption through the lives of small-town women and men in Louisiana. His unforgettable characters include a grandfather who discovers, while taking care of his grandchildren, that they are growing up without any sense at all of right and wrong; a camera repairman who discovers a woman's secret in her undeveloped film; and a one-armed hitchhiker who changes the life of the man who picks her up. Each one a small miracle of storytelling and compassion, Tim Gautreaux's stories are a pleasure from start to finish. You want to hand [this book] to your friends and say 'read this' (The Plain Dealer).
Both hilarious and honest . . . Gautreaux applies love and compassion, knowledge and ingenuity to create something superb. The Seattle Times
Startling and redemptive . . . These stories suggest . . . that to be alive means being open to grief and accident, chance and wonder. The Chicago Tribune
Move Garrison Keilor's Lake Wobegon stories to Louisiana, add heat and Tabasco, and the result would beWelding With Children. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Gautreaux has perfect pitch . . . it's his fiction's coarse incongruities--epitomized by the book's title--that prove the limitless possibilities of limited geography. The New York Times Book Review
Finely balanced, sweet and gritty. The San Francisco Chronicle
A pleasure from start to finish. The Cleveland Plain-Dealer
Welding with Children
Misuse of Light
Good for the Soul
Easy Pickings
The Piano Tuner
The Pine Oil Writers' Conference
Resistance
Sorry Blood
Sunset in Heaven
Rodeo Parole
Dancing with the One-Armed Girl
Tim Gautreauxhas written novels and collections of short stories, one olC0