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July, July
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

July, July Paperback - 2003

by Tim O'Brien

As he did with In the Lake of the Woods, National Book Award winner Tim O'Brien strikes at the emotional nerve center of our lives with this ambitious, compassionate, and terrifically compelling new novel that tells the remarkable story of the generation molded and defined by the 1960s. At the thirtieth anniversary of Minnesota's Darton Hall College class of 1969, ten old friends reassemble for a July weekend of dancing, drinking, flirting, reminiscing, and regretting. The three decades since their graduation have seen marriage and divorce, children and careers, dreams deferred and disappointed-many memories and many ghosts. Together their individual stories create a portrait of a generation launched into adulthood at the moment when their country, too, lost its innocence. Imbued with his signature themes of passion, memory, and yearning, July, July is Tim O'Brien's most fully realized work.


Summary

As he did with In the Lake of the Woods, National Book Award winner Tim O'Brien strikes at the emotional nerve center of our lives with this ambitious, compassionate, and terrifically compelling new novel that tells the remarkable story of the generation molded and defined by the 1960s. At the thirtieth anniversary of Minnesota's Darton Hall College class of 1969, ten old friends reassemble for a July weekend of dancing, drinking, flirting, reminiscing, and regretting. The three decades since their graduation have seen marriage and divorce, children and careers, dreams deferred and disappointed-many memories and many ghosts. Together their individual stories create a portrait of a generation launched into adulthood at the moment when their country, too, lost its innocence. Imbued with his signature themes of passion, memory, and yearning, July, July is Tim O'Brien's most fully realized work.

From the publisher

As he did with "In the Lake of the Woods," National Book Award winner Tim O'Brien strikes at the emotional nerve center of our lives with this ambitious, compassionate, and terrifically compelling new novel that tells the remarkable story of the generation molded and defined by the 1960s. At the thirtieth anniversary of Minnesota's Darton Hall College class of 1969, ten old friends reassemble for a July weekend of dancing, drinking, flirting, reminiscing, and regretting. The three decades since their graduation have seen marriage and divorce, children and careers, dreams deferred and disappointed-many memories and many ghosts. Together their individual stories create a portrait of a generation launched into adulthood at the moment when their country, too, lost its innocence. Imbued with his signature themes of passion, memory, and yearning, "July, July" is Tim O'Brien's most fully realized work.

Details

  • Title July, July
  • Author Tim O'Brien
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition Reissue
  • Pages 320
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Penguin Group, E Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S.A.
  • Date 2003-09-30
  • ISBN 9780142003381 / 0142003387
  • Weight 0.49 lbs (0.22 kg)
  • Dimensions 7.82 x 4.98 x 0.6 in (19.86 x 12.65 x 1.52 cm)
  • Ages 18 to UP years
  • Grade levels 13 - UP
  • Library of Congress subjects Psychological fiction, Humorous fiction
  • Dewey Decimal Code FIC

Excerpt

Class of '69

The reunion dance had started only an hour ago, but already a good many of
the dancers were tipsy, and most others were well along, and now the gossip was
flowing and confessions were under way and old flames were being extinguished
and rekindled under cardboard stars in the Darton Hall College gymnasium.

Amy Robinson was telling Jan Huebner, a former roommate, about the murder
last year of Karen Burns, another former roommate. It's such a Karen sort of
thing, Amy said. Getting killed like that. Nobody else. Only Karen.

Right, Jan said. She waited a moment. Move your tongue, sugar.
Details.

Amy made a weary, dispirited movement with her shoulders. Nothing new,
I'm afraid. Same old Karen story, naive as a valentine. Trust the world. Get
squished.

Poor girl, Jan said.

Poor woman, said Amy.

Jan winced and said, Woman, corpse, whatever. Still single, I suppose?
Karen?

Naturally.

And some guy -- ?

Naturally.

God, Jan said.

Yeah, yeah, said Amy.

Earlier in the evening, they had liberated a bottle of Darton Hall vodka,
which was now almost gone, and both of them were feeling the sting of strong
spirits and misplaced sentiment. They were fifty-three years old. They were
drunk. They were divorced. Time and heartbreak had exacted a toll. Amy Robinson
still had her boyish figure, her button nose and freckles, but collegiate
perkiness had been replaced by something taut and haggard. Jan Huebner had never
been perky. She'd never been pretty, or cute, or even passable, and at the
moment her bleached hair and plucked eyebrows and Midnight Plum lipstick offered
only the most dubious correctives.

What I love about men, Jan was saying, is their basic overall
cockiness. That much I adore. Follow me?

I do, said Amy.

Take away that, what the heck have you got?

You've got zero.

Ha! said Jan.

Cheers, said Amy.

Pricks, said Jan.

They fell quiet then, sipping vodka, watching the class of '69 rediscover
itself on a polished gymnasium dance floor. Unofficially, this was a thirtieth
reunion -- one year tardy due to someone's oversight, an irony that had been much
discussed over cocktails that evening, and much joked about, though not yet
entirely deciphered. Still, it made them feel special. And so, too, did the fact
that they were convening on a deserted campus, in the heart of summer, more than
a month after the standard graduation-day gatherings. The school had a forlorn,
haunted feel to it, many memories, many ghosts, which seemed appropriate.

Well, Jan Huebner finally said. Bad news, of course -- Karen's dead. But
here's some good news. Gal never went through a divorce.

That's a fact, said Amy.

I mean, ouch.

Ouch is accurate, Amy said.

Jan nodded. Twenty-nine years, almost thirty, and guess what? That slick
ex-hubby of mine, Richard the Oily, he grins and waves at me and strolls out the
door. Doesn't walk, doesn't run. Strolls. Talk about murder. Am I wrong about
that?

You are not wrong, said Amy.

We're discussing the male gender, aren't we?

We are.

Well, there's your moral, Jan said. One way or the other, they'll kill
you dead. Every time, flowers and gravestones. No exceptions.

Stone dead, Amy said, and leaned back to scan the crowd of aging
dancers. Thirty-one years, she thought. A new world. After a time she sighed and
freshened their drinks and said, What say we get laid tonight?

Yes, ma'am, said Jan. By pricks.

For sure.

Big, dumb, bald ones.

Amy raised her glass. To Karen Burns.

To divorce, said Jan, and then she turned and waved at Marv Bertel, a
come-dance-with-us motion, but Marv shook his head, tapped his chest, and leaned
back heavily against the bar.

Marv was recovering from a dance with Spook Spinelli, wondering if his
heart could take another hit. He doubted it. He doubted, too, that he should
risk another bourbon, except the drink was already in his hand, cold as a
coffin, and might quiet the jump in his heart. Partly the problem was Spook
Spinelli: those daredevil eyes of hers, that candid, little-girl laugh. Over
half a lifetime, through two tepid marriages, Marv had been massaging the
fantasy that something might develop between them. Pitiful, he thought, yet even
now he couldn't stop hoping. All those years, all that wee-hour solitaire, and
he was still snagged up in Spook Spinelli. Also, of course, there was the issue
of a failing triple bypass, the butter in his arteries, the abundant flab at his
waist. All the same, Marv reasoned, this was a goddamn reunion, possibly his
last, so he knocked the drink back and asked the bartender for one more, on the
rocks, double trouble.

Across the gym, under a flashing blue spotlight, Spook Spinelli was
dancing with Billy McMann. They were hamming it up, making faces, being sexy for
each other, but Billy did not once take his eyes off Dorothy Stier, who stood
talking near the bandstand with Paulette Haslo. After three decades, Billy still
hated Dorothy. He also loved her. The love and the hate had hardened inside him,
one reinforcing the other like layers of brick and mortar. In a few minutes,
Billy decided, he would treat himself to another drink, or maybe three or four,
and then he would amble up to Dorothy and explain the love-hate dynamic to her
in all its historic detail.

Dorothy knew Billy was watching. She knew, too, that Billy still loved
her. Later, she told herself, there would be time to take him outside and admit
to the terrible mistake she had made in 1969. Not that it was a mistake, not in
the long run, because Dorothy had a sweet husband and two incredible kids and
memberships in a couple of smart-set country clubs. Still, if Billy needed a
lie, she saw no harm in offering one. Almost certainly she would kiss him.
Almost certainly she would cry a little. For now, though, Dorothy was busy
telling Paulette Haslo about her breast cancer, which thank God was in
remission, and how supportive her sweet husband and two incredible kids had
been.

It was July 7, 2000, a humid Friday evening.

The war was over, passions were moot, and the band played a slow,
hollowed-out version of an old Buffalo Springfield tune. For everyone, there was
a sense of nostalgia made fluid by present possibility.

So sad, so bizarre, Amy Robinson was saying, but so predictable, too.
The old Karenness, that's what killed her. She never stopped being Karen.

Who did it? said Jan Huebner.

Amy wagged her head. Nobody knows for sure. Some guy she had a crush on,
some creep, which is par for Karen's course. Never any luck.

Never, ever, Jan said. And the thing is, she could've been a knockout,
all the ingredients. That gorgeous red hair, tons and tons of it. I mean, she
was a knockout.

Weight problem, of course, said Amy.

So true, said Jan.

Plus her age. Face it, she was piling up the mileage like all of us. Amy
sighed. Total shame, isn't it? The golden generation. Such big dreams -- kick
ass, never die -- but somehow it all went poof. Hard thing to swallow, but
biology doesn't have politics. The old bod, you know? Just keeps doing its
silly, deadly, boring shit.

True again, said Jan, and blinked down at her hands. What happened to
us?

Got me, said Amy.

Maybe the Monkees.

Sorry?

Plain as day, Jan said. A whole generation kicks off with the Monkees,
how the heck could we expect things to work out? ‘I'm a believer, I couldn't
leave her' -- I mean, yikes, talk about starting off on the wrong foot. So naive
I want to cry. Last train to Clarksville, babe, and we're all aboard.

Amy nodded. You're right, she said.

Of course I'm right, said Jan.

May I ask a question?

Ask.

Where's our vodka?

Similar conversations were occurring all across the darkened gym. Death,
marriage, children, divorce, betrayal, loss, grief, disease: these were among
the topics that generated a low, liquid hum beneath the surface of the music. At
a table near the bar, three classmates sat discussing Amy Robinson's recent good
fortune, how after years of horrid luck she had finally met a decent guy, a math
teacher, and how on her honeymoon the two of them had won a sweepstakes or a
bingo tournament or a state lottery, something of the sort, no one knew quite
what. In any case, Amy was now very well off, thank you, with a fat bank account
and a brand-new Mercedes and a swimming pool the size of Arkansas. Her marriage,
though, had failed. Barely two weeks, someone said, and someone else said,
Talk about irony. Poor Amy. Finally gets lucky, lands a guy, and then the guy
turns unlucky. Back to square one. Even her good luck goes rotten.

Thirty-one years ago, in the brutal spring of 1969, Amy Robinson and many
others had lived beyond themselves, elevated by the times. There was good and
evil. There was moral heat. But this was the year 2000, a new millennium,
congeniality in public places, hope gone stale, morons become millionaires, and
the gossip was about Ellie Abbott's depression, Dorothy Stier's breast cancer,
Spook Spinelli's successful double marriage and the fact that she seemed to be
going for a triple that evening with either Marv Bertel or Billy McMann.

The terrible thing, Jan Huebner was saying, is that Karen was obviously
the best of us. Huge heart. Full of delusions, I'll grant you, but the girl
never once gave up hope.

Which is what killed her, said Amy.

Sorry?

Hope. Lethal.

Jan thought about it for a while. She also thought about her ex-husband,
how he waved and strolled out the door. Maybe we should just stop hoping, she
said. Maybe that's the trick. Never hope.

You think so? said Amy.

Sort of, said Jan.

After some consideration Amy Robinson shrugged and said, Boy, let's hope
not, and the two of them laughed and moved toward the bar to check on Marv
Bertel's heart.

The music now was hard-core Stones translated for the times by clarinets.

Techs were tumbling. Portfolios were in trouble.

Karen Burns was murdered.

Hard to believe, classmates would say, about this, about that, about
belief itself. And as people conversed, shaking their heads, disbelieving, a
pair of slide projectors cast fuzzy old photographs against one of the gymnasium
walls: Amy Robinson as a pert, freckled, twenty-year-old rabble-rouser; Jan
Huebner dressed up as a clown; Karen Burns eyeing a newly hired professor of
sociology; David Todd looking trim and sheepish in his blue and gold baseball
uniform; Spook Spinelli posing topless for the Darton Hall yearbook; Dorothy
Stier in a pink prom gown, ill at ease, glaring at the camera; Billy McMann
clutching Dorothy's hand; Marla Dempsey chasing Paulette Haslo with a fire
extinguisher; Ellie Abbott and Marv Bertel and Harmon Osterberg playing
cantaloupe-soccer in a crowded noontime dining hall. According to a reunion
brochure, sixty-two percent of the class had settled in the Twin Cities area --
Amy Rob-inson and Jan Huebner lived seven blocks apart in the nearby suburb of
Eden Prairie. Forty-nine percent had paid at least one visit to divorce court.
Sixty-seven percent were married. Fifty-eight percent described themselves as
unlucky in love. Almost eighty percent had selected romance and/or spiritual
fulfillment as the governing principle of their lives. In the gymnasium that
evening, under cardboard stars, there were six attorneys, twelve teachers, five
physicians, one chemist, three accountants, nineteen entrepreneurs, fourteen
full-time mothers, one chief executive officer, one actor, one minister, one
Lutheran missionary, one retired librarian, one lieutenant governor. Billy
McMann owned a chain of hardware stores in Winnipeg. Amy Robinson practiced
criminal law. David Todd, who had lost a leg in 1969, and who was now divorced
from Marla Dempsey, ran a successful custom-made furniture business. Paulette
Haslo was a Presbyterian minister, although currently without a church, which
was still another topic of conversation. Hard to believe, isn't it? said a
former point guard for the Darton Hall women's basketball team, now a mother of
three. Little Miss Religion, our own Paulette, she got caught breaking into
this . . . I shouldn't say. Big scandal. God fired her.

Wow, that's horrible, said a former teammate, an accountant for
Honeywell. Maybe we should -- you know -- go say something.

About what?

I don't know what. Try to help.

The former point guard, now a mother of three, shook her head and said,
No way, I'm in heat, I deserve some fun, and then she moved off swiftly toward
the bar.

A solid one hundred percent of them, the brochure declared, had come to
the reunion ready to party.

It was a muggy evening, oppressively hot. In an open doorway at the rear
of the gymnasium, Ellie Abbott fanned herself with a fallen cardboard star,
sharing a cigarette with David Todd and Marla Dempsey. The three of them were
cordial enough, even laughing at times, but here too, as with Amy Robinson and
Jan Huebner, hope was a problem. Marla was hoping that David would stop staring
at her. Ellie was hoping that Marla would stop talking about their classmate
Harmon Osterberg, who had drowned last summer in the waters of northern
Minnesota. David Todd was hoping that Marla regretted leaving him in favor of a
glib young stockbroker with a wallet only slightly fatter than his head.

He was a dentist, Marla said. She looked at Ellie, then at David, then
down at her folded arms. Harmon, I mean. And a good dentist, too. Super gentle.
At least that's what people said. She stopped, looked away. Maybe you already
knew that.

I did, said Ellie.

Marla sighed. God, it makes me sick. Such a dear, dear guy, always so
happy, and now he's just -- no offense -- he's this dead dentist. I mean, if
Harmon could be here tonight, I bet anything he'd be telling dentist jokes.

And drowning jokes, said David.

Ellie said nothing. For eleven and a half months she had said nothing.

She made a vague flipping motion with her wrist, took a last drag on
David's cigarette, excused herself, slipped inside, sat alone on the bleachers
for a time, waited for the loons to leave her head, waited for Harmon to finish
drowning, and then went off to find her husband.

In the gymnasium's open doorway, David Todd and Marla Demp-sey watched
Ellie slide away into the crowd of dancers.

Take a guess what I'm thinking, David said.

Ellie and Harmon, said Marla. They came close a million times. Maybe
finally . . .

Like us?

No. Not like us.

A quiet came between them, which they recognized from their years of
marriage: power failure. They'd always wanted different things. It was no one's
fault. Even while they were together, Marla had made it clear that she could not
wholly commit, that their marriage was an experiment, that David's missing leg
sometimes gave her the creeps. She hated touching the wrinkled stump, hated
looking at it. And there was also the scary suspicion that this man could
sometimes read her mind, like a fortuneteller, as if some spy or peeping tom had
been slipping him all her secrets over the years.

Even now, as David smiled at her, Marla wondered what the smile concealed.
He was a good man, yes, but even his goodness frightened her.

So go ahead, David was saying. I'm ready.

Go ahead what?

Ask where I'm staying.

Marla frowned. I'll bite. Where are you staying?

On campus. Flarety Hall. We can be there in sixty seconds.

If we run?

Gimp, he said, and slapped a hand against his prosthesis. Take our
time, move slow, it'll be like --

Stop.

Right. Sorry. I'm stopped.

Marla studied him with flat, neutral eyes. Anyway, look at me. Eight
extra pounds. Not a clue where it came from.

You look exquisite, said David.

Sweet, sweet lie.

My pleasure. David took the cigarette from her lips and threw it to the
ground. Don't do that to yourself. Makes a girl infertile.

Marla glanced at him, surprised.

I hadn't noticed that you've stopped.

No. But I'm me, my love. You're you.

‘My love'?

Sorry again. Divorced, right?

Light me another one, David.

No can do. What about those unborn babies?

Pity, Marla said, but they'll have to live with it. Come on, fire me
up.

David tapped out a cigarette, slipped it between her lips, struck a match,
and watched her lean in toward the flame. Lovely woman, he thought. Steel eyes.
Silver-blond hair, cut short. Trim. No hips. No sign of any extra eight pounds.
They'd remained friends over the years, sharing lunches, sometimes sharing a
bed, and David found it impossible to believe that they would not somehow end up
living together and getting old together and finally occupying the same patch of
earth. Anything else seemed mad. Worse than mad. Plain evil.

Marla blew smoke into the July night.

Much better, she said.

Not for our babies.

David, please, just lay off the baby bit. I'm low on the estrogen. Empty
tanks. I'm old.

You're not old.

Oh, I am. Always was. She looked away, looked back at him, went up on
her toes to kiss his cheek. It's this reunion crap, David. Makes people mushy.

Mushy, mushy me, said David.

Absolutely. Mushy you.

I need to ask something.

Is it mushy?

It is, he said.

No, she said. Don't ask.

Marla folded her arms and stepped back.

She was fond of David, and wished things could be otherwise, but what he
wanted from her had never been a possibility. Ordinary love -- what most people
thought of as love -- meant little to her. All she'd ever wanted was to be alone.

Let's dance, she said. I'm not good at this.

At what?

This. Talking.

Fair enough. But if you don't talk, I don't dance.

The leg?

Not the leg, he said. I was just hoping . . . Forget it.

You could watch, couldn't you?

Sure, he said.

He followed Marla inside and stood watching as she danced with Dorothy
Stier and Spook Spinelli. It was true, he thought, that she'd put on some wear
and tear. The sockets of her eyes had yellowed, and her skin had a brittle,
crumbly texture that took him by surprise. She looked her age, which was fifty-
three. But even so. A stunning fifty-three. In point of fact, he decided, a
sublime and heartbreaking and drop-dead magnificent fifty-three. For all the
years, there was still the essential Marla glow, a magnetic field, whatever it
was that made Marla into Marla, and that made his own life worth the pain of
living it.

After a time Marv Bertel cut in and took Spook off into a corner, and a
moment later Dorothy Stier went off to make peace with Billy McMann, and then
Marla danced alone.

Well, David thought.

Dream girl.

He turned away.

The evening had been hard on him, because he wanted Marla so badly, and
because she'd lived inside him for so many years, through a whole war, then
through a nine-year marriage, and then for the decades afterward. To her great
credit, he real ized, Marla had never feigned passion, never promised any-
thing. David believed her when she said she cared for him. But he'd come to
despise the word care. He did not care for it. Nor did he care for the
terrible truth that Marla only cared for him.

After two drinks David left the gym. He made his way across campus to
Flarety Hall, took the elevator up to his room, removed his trousers and
prosthesis, popped a Demerol, popped a half sheet of acid, lay down on the tile
floor, and allowed the narcotics to carry him away to a shallow, fast-moving
river called the Song Tra Ky.

Ellie Abbott left not long afterward with her husband Mark and with the
sound of waterfowl in her head. Harmon would not quit drowning on her. She had
dared two affairs in her life, and the second had gone very, very badly, and for
almost a year now Harmon Osterberg had been drowning in her dreams. It was
something she could never talk about. Not with Mark, not with anyone. The affair
had developed by accident, a mild flirtation, never serious, but the
consequences were enough to make her believe in Satan. For the rest of her life
Ellie would be living with the terror of a ringing telephone, a midnight knock
at the door. Secrecy was squeezing the future out of her.

In the cab, as they returned to their hotel, her husband said, Was it
fun?

Fun? she said.

The reunion. Old friends. What else?

There was a vacuum, as if a hole had opened up between them, and for a few
seconds Ellie wondered if she might find the courage to fill it with the truth.

Instead, she said, Oh, fun.

Almost everyone else partied well past midnight. There were door prizes,
and later a limbo contest, and later still a talent show designed for laughs.
Marv Bertel was among those who stayed. Bad heart and all, he danced several
times with Spook Spinelli, who was already married, doubly, and who divided her
time between two adoring husbands and a now-and-then lover on the side. By one
in the morning Spook's head was on Marv's shoulder. I'm a lardass, he told
her, but I'd make a fantastic third husband. Hide me under your bed. Beds, I
mean. Plural.

Spook said, Nice dream, isn't it?

Just say maybe.

Maybe, she said.

Dorothy Stier stayed late too. She stood outside with Billy McMann, trying
to explain away her mistake, or what Billy called a mistake. She blamed it on
religion and politics and the vast differences between them in 1969. I was
Catholic, she reminded him. I was a Nixon chick. What else could I do?

They have churches in Winnipeg, Billy said. They have tea services.

At least dance with me.

No, thanks, he said.

Please?

Can't. Won't. Very sorry. He would not look at her. So where's Ron this
evening?

Stop it.

Let me guess, said Billy. Home with the kids?

Correct.

You bet correct. Home. Kids. Correct's the fucking word.

Inside, Marla Dempsey still danced alone, down inside herself.

Sixty seconds away, David Todd lay shot through both feet, dumb as dirt,
sky high, listening to the sound of everness cut through the tall, bloody grass
along a shallow river west of Chu Lai.

Harmon Osterberg was drowned.

Karen Burns was murdered.

In a downtown hotel room, Ellie Abbott lay under the sheets with her
husband Mark. At one point Ellie began to reach out to him. She almost said
something.

Just after 1:30 in the morning the band stopped playing. The lights came
up, people began drifting toward the door, but then someone found a radio and
turned up the volume and the party went on.

At the rear of the gym, six former football players ran passing plays.

The twin slide projectors pinned history to the wall. RFK bled from a hole
in his head. Ellie Abbott swam laps with Harmon Osterberg in the Darton Hall
pool, and Amy Robinson hoisted a candle for Martin Luther King, and a helicopter
rose from a steaming rice paddy west of Chu Lai, and David Todd bent down to
field a sharp grounder, and Spook Spinelli grinned her sexy young grin, and
Billy McMann dropped a fiery draft card from the third-floor balcony of the
student union, and the Chicago police hammered in the head of a young man in
whiskers, and Paulette Haslo led a pray-in for peace, and Apollo 11 lifted off
for the moon, and the President of the United States told heroic lies in the
glaring light of day. Out on the dance floor, Minnesota's lieutenant governor
and his ex-fiancée, now a Lutheran missionary, swayed slowly to fast music. A
chemist explored the expansive hips of a retired librarian. A prominent
physician and one of the full-time mothers, formerly a star point guard, made
their way toward the women's locker room. Unofficially, this was a thirtieth
reunion -- officially a thirty-first -- and for many members of the class of '69,
maybe for all of them, the world had whittled itself down to now or never.

Billy McMann and Dorothy Stier had gotten nowhere. They stood near the
bar, apportioning blame.

Paulette Haslo was on her hands and knees, drunk, peering up at the
cardboard stars. All I ever wanted, she was telling no one, was to be a good
minister. That's all. Nothing else.

The chemist kissed the weathered throat of his retired librarian.

Minnesota's lieutenant governor had vanished. So, too, had his ex-fiancée,
now a Lutheran missionary.

Spook Spinelli sat in Marv Bertel's lap. Marv was certain his time had
come. Spook was certain about nothing, least of all her own heart. After a while
she excused herself, got up, and went off to call her two husbands and a now-
and-then lover named Baldy Devlin.

At a back table, over the last of their vodka, Amy Robinson was confiding
in Jan Huebner about her disastrous honeymoon, explaining how packets of
hundred-dollar bills had ended up in her purse. Good luck, Amy said, always came
in streaks, and she was afraid she'd used up every last bit of hers on the
honeymoon. It sounds superstitious, she said, but I wonder if I've got any
left. Luck, I mean. For the real world.

Divorce sucks, Jan said.

Big-time, said Amy.

Jan looked around the gym. Maybe we'll strike gold. This whole place,
take a look around. Nobody left except a bunch of wretched old drunks like us.
People who need people.

I hate that song, said Amy.

The universe hates it, said Jan. Except for my ex-husband.

Screw the guy, said Amy.

All the guys, said Jan.

Cheers, Amy said.

Cheers, said Jan.

Amy finished off her drink, closed her eyes, blinked out a smile. Crazy,
crazy thing, isn't it?

Crazy what?

Oh, I don't know, just getting old, said Amy. You and me, our whole
dreamy generation. Used to be, we'd talk about the Geneva Accords, the Tonkin
Gulf Resolution. Now it's down to liposuction and ex-husbands. Can't trust
anybody over sixty. Amy shook her head. For a few seconds she tapped her empty
glass against the table. And you know the worst part? Here's the absolute worst
part. Our old-fogy parents -- yours and mine, everybody's -- they didn't know jack
about jack. Couldn't spell Hanoi if you spotted them the vowels. But one thing
they did know, they knew damn well where we'd end up. They knew where all the
roads go.

Which is where? Jan said.

Here.

Sorry?

Right here.

Jan sighed. True enough, she said. But look at it this way. Things
could be worse. We're not Karen Burns.

Media reviews

"A small-scale tour de force by an American original . . . Tim O'Brien is one of the most accomplished members of a generation of writers that includes Don DeLillo and Thomas Pynchon."
ùAtlanta Journal-Constitution

"The individual portraits are astonishing for their clarity of character, for their narrative thrills and surprises, for their humor and hard-won wisdom. . . . July, July gives readers plenty of reasons to celebrate."
ùChicago Sun-Times

"Taut and compelling."
ùLos Angeles Times

"O'Brien's individual stories are crafted with exquisite precision. His writing is taut and unsentimental, and packs an emotional wallop."
ùSan Francisco Chronicle

"O'Brien's individual stories are crafted with exquisite precision. His writing is taut and unsentimental, and packs an emotional wallop." (San Francisco Chronicle)

About the author

Minnesota native Tim O'Brien graduated from Macalester College in St. Paul in 1968. He served as a foot soldier in Vietnam from February 1969 to March 1970. Following his military service, he went to graduate school in Government at Harvard University, then later worked as a national affairs reporter for The Washington Post. O'Brien is the author of the novel Going After Cacciato, winner of the 1979 National Book Award for fiction, and of The Things They Carried, winner of the 1990 Chicago Tribune Heartland Award in fiction. Its title story, first published in Esquire, received the 1987 National Magazine Award in fiction. His other books are If I Die in a Combat Zone, Northern Lights, and The Nuclear Age. His work has appeared in numerous magazines, including Esquire, The Atlantic Monthly, Playboy, McCall's, Granta, Harper's, Redbook, The New Republic, Ploughshares, Gentleman's Quarterly, and Saturday Review. His short stories have been anthologized in The O. Henry Prize Stories (1976, 1978, 1982), Great Esquire Fiction, Best American Short Stories (1978, 1987), The Pushcart Prize (Vols. II and X), and in many textbooks and collections. He has received awards from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Massachusetts Arts and Humanities Foundation.In the Lake of the Woods was selected by the editors of The New York Times Book Review as one of the best books of 1994.

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