The First Hurt

Stories by
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first hurt

“Rachel Sherman’s stories are real wonders—brave, dangerous fictions full of heart and wit. She gets to the creepy, despairing, hilarious core of adolescence like few writers I’ve read. This is an amazing debut.”
Sam Lipsyte

“Rachel Sherman writes stories like splinters: they get under your skin and stay with you long after you’ve closed the book. These haunting stories are both wonderfully, deeply weird and unsettlingly familiar.”
Judy Budnitz

“In this excellent first collection, the human body is a promise of future happiness and a source of present embarrassment. The prose is another matter: polished, poised, sure of itself. It’s a very grown-up way of recording the queasy intimacies, the frighteningly raw perceptions, and the almost cosmic desolation of a suburban adolescence.”
Benjamin Kunkel

"[Sherman's] pared-down yet oddly poetic prose has the delicacy—and the potential pain—of a dentist's glittering probe. Even though her touch is light, when she hits the nerve, you flinch. [These stories are] sharp, smart, and able to deftly limn the subtle, shifting outlines of alienation and sorrow."
Yona Zeldis McDonough, Bookforum

"A startling debut collection...As in A. M. Homes’s The Safety of Objects, the angst here is set in well-groomed places—developments, summer houses, manicured streets...Sherman’s straightforward prose provides a contrast to her characters’ unsettling behavior."
Lara Tupper, The Believer (click here for full review)

“Laser-cut narratives . . . Full of great, quirky lines, the book would be a good read even if it did condescend to its flawed characters, but it doesn’t. Instead, it takes the constraints of its context seriously, wondering not how its characters will escape—their bodies, their boring neighborhoods, their unreciprocated lust—but how they’ll behave when they can’t.”
Michael Miller, Time Out New York (click here for full review)

"If Sherman were a photographer, she'd be a paparazzo exposing people's most desperately concealed flaws. But unlike a cold soul with a zoom lens, the author renders her subjects clearly and empathetically, and her airy, poetic prose is a perfect match for the brittle environments she describes . . .The mood of the book is downcast, but Sherman's prose never becomes melodramatically glum or tedious . . . Her melodic style, rife with dream imagery, gives these stories a lift—her deceptively revealing dialogue and direct sentences lay her characters bare but never pummel them."
Kirkus

"In a highly promising debut collection of stories, Sherman writes of alienated lower-end white suburbia in a manner that shifts perspectives with an effortlessness that mitigates her characters' sad stuckness . . . By the time one reaches the last story . . . one has given up any resistance to Sherman's grotesques and settled all the way in to a very uncomfortable place."
Publishers Weekly

"[Sherman] seamlessly protrays the world of adolescent girls who, on the brink of sexual experience, find themselves surrounded by adults who cavort like teenagesrs. Sherman's writing is so refined; it is a pleasure to find that her characters are not...Anyone who can remember the stirrings caused by shoulders rubbing in homeroom, or the agonies of squandered teenage love with find a companion in The First Hurt."
Caroline Seklir, The Brooklyn Rail

"Hilarious and disturbing . . . Sherman deals with sexuality on candid terms, depicting the fine line between what we want and what we know with precision. The simplicity of Sherman's prose allows the reader speedy entry into the painfully familiar world of adolescence and young adulthood. There are few fireworks here, but no less bang."
Elizabeth Crane, Time Out Chicago

"Sherman's writing is sharp, hard, and honest; there's a fearlessness in her work, an I'm-not-afraid-to-say-this quality. Becasue she knows that most of us have thought the same but didn't have the guts to say it."
Nina Maclaughlin, Boston Phoenix

"Rather than a mountain-steep line that stops abruptly in adolescence, the learning curve of the human body is gradual and endless. Each age offers its own set of embarrassments and obsessions; the characters in Rachel Sherman's debut short-story collection are no exception...Thankfully, these unsettling stories avoid florid descriptions and tidy resolutions. Like her characters' own self-assessment, Sherman's spare, detatched style yields a somewhat cold take on sexuality, reminiscent of A.M. Homes and Mary Gaitskill."
Karla Starr, Seattle Weekly

In this brilliantly original story collection, Rachel Sherman evokes the wonders and horrors of a young woman’s life, from girl to teenager to adult, through crushes, sex, family, and the agonies and ecstasies of finding one’s way. The First Hurt heralds the arrival of a singularly fresh and remarkably assured new voice.

Sherman’s beautifully direct and deceptively simple prose produces accessible, shockingly real narratives that combine a disarming sexual edge with great sensitivity and humor. From a high-school girl’s crush on her female teacher, to a family’s serenity threatened by a sexy Danish au pair, to a girl’s sexually outrageous soldier penpal, all the way to a young couple’s horrifying yet life-affirming experience of learning to love their brain-injured newborn twins, this collection wends its way around the deepest of struggles with unusual frankness and wisdom.

Rachel Sherman was born in 1975. She holds an MFA in fiction from Columbia University. Her short stories have appeared in McSweeney’s, Open City, Post Road, n+1, and StoryQuarterly, among other publications, and in the book Full Frontal Fiction: The Best of Nerve.

The First Hurt
Stories by Rachel Sherman
Paperback original publication date: May 16, 2006

Author Tour • National Publicity • Fiction • 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 • 160 pages •
ISBN-13: 978-1-890447-41-0 • ISBN-10: 1-890447-41-2 • $13.00 U.S.
Author's web site: www.thefirsthurt.com

To place an order, contact Publishers Group West, 800.788.3123.
For all other inquiries, contact Joanna Yas, 212.625.9048, /*' + username + '@' + hostname + '');/*]]>*/">.

 

RACHEL SHERMAN'S BOOK TOUR:

Sunday, September 17, 7PM KGB Sunday Fiction Reading Series
KGB Bar, 85 E. 4th Street, NYC
kgbbar.com

September 20 - 25
The Frank O’Connor Short Story Award
Cork, Ireland
Munster Literature Center

Friday, September 22, 8 PM, Reading/Discussion
Writer’s Voice Visiting Author Series, West Side YMCA
The George Washington Lounge5 West 63rd Street (between Central Park West & Broadway),
New York City

Wednesday , October 11, 7:30 PM Reading/Signing with Ben Fountain
The Books & Brews Series, Newtonville Books
296 Walnut Street, Newton, MA 02460
tel: 617.244.6619
newtonvillebooks.com

Friday, November 3
Reading & discussion with Joanna Yas of Open City
The New School, New York City (exact time & location TBA)

February 24 - March 6th, 2007
Jewish Book Week
London, England

PAST READINGS:

Friday, April 28, Reading with Thomas Beller, 7PM
Open City Reading at the Nova Art Fair
Ann Sather (restaurant)
Atrium Room
929 West Belmont
Chicago, IL 60657
novaartfair.com

Monday, May 1, Reading/Signing, 7:30 PM
Barnes & Noble, Greenwich Village
396 Avenue of the Americas (corner of Eighth Street), New York City, 212.674.8780
(this event includes a special voucher program with B&N; for all purchases made at this store on April 30 & May 1, B&N will donate a portion of the proceeds to Open City; click here for a voucher)

Wednesday, May 17, 7 PM, Author/Editor discussion with Joanna Yas
McNally Robinson Booksellers
50 Prince Street (between Lafayette & Mulberry), New York, NY 10012
Tel: 212.274.1160
mcnallyrobinsonnyc.com

Thursday, May 18, 7:30 PM, Reading with Sam Lipsyte
Pete's Candy Store
709 Lorimer Street, Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY 11211
petescandystore.com

Sunday, May 21, 4 PM, Reading/Signing
Elliott Bay Book Co.
101 South Main Street, Seattle, Washington 98104
local phone: (206) 624-6600, toll-free: 800-962-5311
elliottbaybook.com

Monday, May 22, 7:30 PM, Reading/Signing with Peter Rock
Powell’s Books on Hawthorne
3723 SE Hawthorne Blvd., Portland, OR 97214
powells.com

Wednesday, May 24th, 7:30pm, Reading hosted by Kitchen Sink Magazine
Pegasus Books Downtown
2349 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley, CA 94704, tel: 510-649-1320
pegasusbookstore.com

Thursday, May 25, 7PM, Reading/Signing
City Lights
261 Columbus Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94133
Tel: 415.362.8193
citylights.com

Monday, May 29, 7 PM, Reading/Signing
Essentials
88 Main Street, Northampton, MA
shopessentials.net

 

Wednesday, May 31, 7PM Mr. Beller's Neighborhood reading with Bryan Charles & Greg Purcell
KGB Bar, 85 E. 4th Street, NYC
kgbbar.com

Thursday, July 13, 8 PM, Reading/Signing
Book Revue
313 New York Avenue, Huntington, NY 11743
bookrevue.com