Description
                                                            
Fiction. Stephen Dixon has long been considered one of America's preeminent literary innovators. From the National Book Award nominated 
Frog and 
Interstate, to 
His Wife Leaves Him and 
Letters to Kevin, Dixon's "unpredictable, often haunting fiction has given him no shortage of high-profile admirers" (
Vol. 1 Brooklyn).
In 
Late Stories, he brought us the aging Philip Seidel--widowed, isolated, but resolutely continuing to write. Now, in DEAR ABIGAIL, he returns us to Seidel's freewheeling recollections. Still bereft, still yearning, Seidel, ever recounting, reimagining, and twisting up the details of his existence--seemingly unable to extricate them from the memory (and fantasies) of his late wife--struggles to let go of Abigail when even grief seems to have run its course. Although a companion to 
Late Stories, DEAR ABIGAIL stands on its own as a tender, cagey, deeply felt exploration of togetherness and heartbreak.