Mitchell Waldman
top of page

Mitchell Waldman

About The Author

Mitchell Waldman's new story collection, BROTHERS, FATHERS, AND OTHER STRANGER deals with the subjects of family dysfunction, Adolf Hitler, work, the spirit of Kurt Cobain, an angel giving an aging alcoholic a second chance, and men seeking meaning in their lives. Of the work readers have said "Waldman has crafted a nuanced and engaging collection. His stories set us on an emotional tightrope, daring us to forgo a safety net, while seducing us to look down and discover who we are. Sometimes poignantly devastating, and other times savagely funny, he guides us through family trauma, corporate America, and faithful understanding to remind us if we can be less of a stranger to the world, maybe we can be less of a stranger to ourselves." (Josh Penzone, author of The Court of Vintage Woods: Linked Stories). Readers have also said that "Brothers, Fathers, and Other Strangers is remarkable for its scope, honesty, imagination, social sensitivity, and moral concern." (Robert Wexelblatt, author of The Thirteenth Studebaker, Hsi-wei Tales, etc.) And it has been said that "[I]n Brothers, Fathers, and Other Strangers, Waldman explores masculinity, but not stereotypical masculinity. In these stories, you will see men battling their memories and emotions as they attempt to come to grips with their pasts and make a way for their lives. Waldman sets his work in reality with a dash of fantasy and the occasional twist ending. Waldman is doing something special in the short story form, and his stories will entertain, enlighten, and elate." (Hardy Jones, author of Resurrection of Childhood: A Memoir, and Every Bitter Thing).

Robert Wexelblatt expanded on BROTHERS, with the following review: "Mitchell Waldman’s latest collection comes in three parts. First, there are stories of a blended family narrated by a stepbrother and stepson with either the urgency of a teen or the retrospection of an adult. They probe a fraught relationship with a stepbrother, detachment from a stepfather, and disengagement from a biological father. The narrator’s mother provides only a small measure of consolation from the bleakness. Taken together, these stories constitute an episodic novella working out permutations of awkwardness, disappointment, baffled love, and open resentment. Waldman persuasively renders the insecurities of his narrator and the pain of blended families that fail to blend. The style here is realistic while the second section leaves realism for a series of alternative biographies of Adolf Hitler—as an immigrant in Brooklyn, a local plumber, gardening with Fraulein Braun. In one story, Hitler occupies the consciousness of a Jewish dentist as he did Poland and France. Part Three is focused on the quiet desperation of economically marginalized, socially alienated, emotionally stunted males. Two main themes of this section are bad jobs and theodicy, the implacable actual and the dubious supernatural. The stories delve into the feelings and thoughts of alienated men, the kind of American males fulminating with resentment and teetering on the cusp of despair who have had much to do with our recent politics. Brothers, Fathers, and Other Strangers is remarkable for its scope, honesty, imagination, social sensitivity, and moral concern."

For more information on the book, go to http://mitchwaldman.homestead.com/Brothers--Fathers--and-Other-Strangers.html

Mitchell is also the author of the short story collection, PETTY OFFENSES AND CRIMES OF THE HEART (originally published by Wind Publications), a 2015 BookBzz Prize Writers Contest finalist. Regarding the book, one reviewer has commented that "Faulkner said that an author's job is to make the extraordinary seem ordinary and to make the ordinary seem extraordinary, and in PETTY OFFENSES this is what Waldman accomplishes." Stories in the collection include a Pushcart Prize nominated story and a First Prize winning story from 13th Story Magazine.

In addition, Waldman is the author of the novel, A FACE IN THE MOON (Writers Club Press, 2000), with regard to which one commentator has stated that "with more novels like his debut tale that demonstrates Mitchell Waldman's tremendous talent for genuine characters in real life settings, the author will not remain faceless for very long."

His stories, poetry, articles, and essays have appeared in numerous publications, including, among others, The Chamber Magazine, Northeast Indiana Literary Journal, Short Story Town, Bewildering Stories, The MacGuffin, Foliate Oak Literary Magazine, Fictive Dream, Spelk, The Academy of Heart and Mind, Potato Soup Journal, Anser Journal, The Fear of Monkeys, The Magnolia Review, Furtive Dalliance, Whatever Our Souls, The Soft Cartel, Down in the Dirt Magazine, Literally Stories, Corvus Review, The Machinery--A Literary Collection, The Bond Street Review, Baby Lawn Literature, Peachfish Magazine, the Avalon Literary Journal, Random Sample, Crack the Spine, Fiction on the Web, Alfie Dog Fiction, The Faircloth Review, The Battered Suitcase, Epiphany, Foliate Oak, Waterhouse Review, Eunoia Review, The Brooklyn Voice, The Big Stupid Review, The Houston Literary Review, Milk Sugar, The Legendary, Litsnack, Connotation Press, Red Fez, Wind Magazine, Wilderness House Literary Review, Eclectic Flash, eFiction Magazine, Poetpourri, Mobius, Hazmat Review, Poetry Motel, The Advocate, Desperate Act, and The Rochester Times-Union. His work has also been anthologized in BEYOND LAMENT: POETS OF THE WORLD BEARING WITNESS TO THE HOLOCAUST (Northwestern University Press, 1998), AMERICA REMEMBERED (Virgogray Press, 2010), MESSAGES FROM THE UNIVERSE (iUniverse, 2002), LOOKING BEYOND (Scars Publications, 2011), PROMINENT PEN (Scars Publications, 2011), GREEN (MLM, 2010), The LIGHTHOUSE (Scars Publications, 2017), LOCKDOWN'S OVER (Scars Publications, 2021), DESERT BLOOM (Scars Publications, 2021), THE ALIEN BUDDHA GETS A REAL JOB (Alien Buddha Press, 2021), and THE ALIEN BUDDHA SKIPS THE PARTY (Alien Buddha Press, 2021).

Waldman serves as Fiction Editor for Blue Lake Review (http://bluelakereview.weebly.com), and was co-editor (with Diana Waldman) of the anthologies WOUNDS OF WAR: POETS FOR PEACE, and HIP POETRY (originally published by Wind Publications).

His book reviews have appeared at Scribes World and Midwest Book Review.

Waldman studied with Mark Costello (author of THE MURPHY STORIES and MIDDLE MURPHY) and Paul Friedman (author of AND IF DEFEATED ALLEGE FRAUD and SERIOUS TROUBLE) at the University of Illinois (Champaign-Urbana).

Mitchell has been a writer and editor in the legal publishing field for over 35 years.

He lives in Rochester, New York, with his partner, Diana Waldman, a journalist and author of the poetry book, A WOMAN'S SONG.

For more information on Mitchell's and Diana's books and writings, see their web page at: http://mitchwaldman.homestead.com

 

Mitchell Waldman

top
author

Find me on

facebook.png
twitter.png
instagram.png
amazon_PNG4.png
Exclusive Interview with the Author >>

Short Stories by the Author

Spirits in the Night

Spirits in the Night

My dead father isn't talking to me. That he doesn't talk to me is odd, since every other spirit talks to me, they all do. But for some reason he's reticent, dumb, mute. No thoughts, no words, no sudden appearances to guide me, to give me direction or inspiration in my life and ways, good or bad...

No Short Stories by the Author

Books by the Author

A Face in the Moon
Petty Offenses and Crimes of the Heart
Brothers. Fathers, and Other Strangers
bottom of page