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What It Used to Be Like: A Portrait of My Marriage to Raymond Carver


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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 809
EAN: 9780312332594
ISBN: 0312332599
Label: St. Martin's Griffin
Manufacturer: St. Martin's Griffin
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 368
Publication Date: July 10, 2007
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
Release Date: July 10, 2007
Studio: St. Martin's Griffin


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Editorial Review:

Product Description:
Maryann Burk Carver met Raymond Carver in 1955, when she was fifteen-years-old and he seventeen. In What It Used to be Like, Maryann Burk Carver recounts a tale of love at first sight in which the two teenagers got to know each other by sharing a two year long-distance correspondence that soon after found them married and with two small children.

Over the next twenty-five years, as Carver's fame grew, the family led a nomadic life, moving from school to school, teaching post to teaching post. Finally, in 1972, they settled in Cupertino, California where Raymond Carver gave his wife one of his sharpened pencils and bade her to write an account of their history. The result is a breathtaking memoir of a marriage replete with the intimacy of detail that fully reveals the illnesses and talents of this larger than life man, his complicated relationships, and his profound loves and losses.
What It Used to Be Like brings to light, for the first time, Raymond Carver's lost years and stories and the "stories behind the stories" of this most brilliant writer.

MARYANN BURK CARVER married Raymond Carver when she was sixteen and he was nineteen. They were married for twenty-five years, and had two children, Christi and Vance. Maryann Burk Carver is a teacher living on Lummi Island in Washington State.

"Maryann covers the tumultuous circumstances of her 18 years of marriage to Raymond Carver in page after page that may be easily construed as plot outlines for Carver's early short story masterpieces."
--Sam Halpert, author of Raymond Carver: An Oral Biography and A Real Good War

"Ray Carver had a brilliant and heartbreakingly brief career. Seventeen years after his death, we still miss him like crazy. Mary Ann Carver, his first wife, tells the story of how she and he fell through the ice with honesty and considerable courage."
--William Kittredge, author of Hole in the Sky and The Best Short Stories of William Kittredge

"The marriage between Ray carver and Maryann Burk which commenced when they were teenagers and lasted 25 years, was absurd, tenacious, and sometimes cruel. There was much partying and aimless wandering. Unfathomable decisions were made. Yet the marriage was also the bedrock beneath a small earthquake in the American short story A humble agent transubstantiational in its effect. This is a dear, sturdy, disarming memoir which proves, at the very least, that even dead 18 years, the masterful Ray Carver knows how to keep the love of a good woman.
--Joy Williams, author of The Quick and the Dead and Honored Guest

"A testimony of a marriage as well as a portrait of an artist before becoming ‘The Author.’ It is the story of the hunger for education, the necessity of art, in the lives of the working poor. I hope it helps dispel myths about working-class writers, about the creative/destructive spirit, about violence and love. For folks who live paycheck to paycheck, for readers whose books are all stamped ‘Property of the Public Library,’ this story is only too familiar.”
--Sandra Cisneros, author of The House on Mango Street and Caramelo

“Good writers write what they know, but great writers show us what they know to be true. Raymond and Maryann Burk Carver dared to be great in America and, in the end, both paid a terrible price. ‘It’s an amazing life, an amazing life,’ Raymond Carver once said. Indeed it was. And it will break your heart because, like all great stories, it is true.”
--Diane Smith, author of Letters from Yellowstone and Pictures from an Expedition

“Raymond Carver is one of the very best writer’s of the late 20th century. He met his first wife, Maryann Burk, when he was sixteen and she was fourteen. Her memoir of their nearly twenty-five years together is an incredible account not only of their relationship, but also of Carver’s development as a writer. It is indispensable to anyone who cares about Carver’s work.”
--Stephen Dobyns




Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - A Necessary Read For Anyone Serious About Fiction Writing
Of course it's Maryann's view. Of course it's not Ray's writing. But it's an intimate view into the life of a committed writer who started at the bottom and rose to the stratosphere of respect in the world of literary short fiction. This is a well-written behind-the-scenes view of Ray Carver's herculean struggle and the effect it had on his family.

If I ever win the lottery, I'm going to set up a trust fund for struggling writers and their families. It's a sad reflection on our country's ... Read More



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Tikkun Olam
Maryann Burk Carver's memoir of her marriage to Ray Carver is ultimately a tragic story of self-indulgence. Ray Carver inflicted deep wounds on his family so that he could write clever stories for clever academics. Are his stories worth the near destruction of his family's lives? Mary Ann Burk Carver is guilty in this abusive marriage as well by taking this freeloading drunk back again and again. Yes, it's easy for me looking from a distance to criticize and maybe I don't know enough about love, but ... Read More



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Read this and you STILL won't know about Raymond Carver!
Anyone who wants to read this book does so because of Raymond Carver. You will not find anything more about Raymond Carver that is already written. This book is solely about Mary Ann Carver. Ok, so who is Mary Ann Carver??? Why would I want to learn every detail, excessive memory detail about just anybody. After 200 hundred pages I began to think, "I still don't know about Raymond Carver."

"Nobody gives writers' wives any credit"
Mary Ann admits that at parties and gatherings ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Raymond's Muse
It is impossible, having read this book, not to find Maryann Burk's imprint on nearly everything Ray Carver wrote. Every couple, every Jack or Iris, every 'I and she,' turn out to be Ray and Maryann Carver, and every incident is an incident lifted from their life together and, later, their lives apart, rendered hauntingly and brilliantly by Carver. His stories only grow richer for having been placed in this larger context.

I couldn't disagree more with the Publishers Weekly review. I found ... Read More



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - instructional manual for destroying children
This is a cautionary tale about marrying too young and being impulsive. The Carvers were children when they wed, and popped out two kids in about 12 months. Those poor children were dragged from pillar to post to satisfy their father's wanderlust and their mother's poor self control. No wonder both kids turned out, as one 'friend' is quoted to the author 'f__ed up".
The two parents were constantly one step ahead of the debt collector, and never put the needs of their children ahead of whatever ... Read More




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