Nothing Very Important and Other Stories

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AuthorBéla Petsco
LanguageEnglish
Nothing Very Important and Other Stories
AuthorBéla Petsco
LanguageEnglish
GenreShort story collection
Set inSouthern California
Publisherself-published, Signature Books
Publication date
1979; 1984
ISBN0911712607

Nothing Very Important and Other Stories is a collection of interconnected short stories written by Béla Petsco and self-published in 1979 with illustrations by his friend Kathryn Clark-Spencer. The stories are about missionaries from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) working in Southern California. Signature Books reprinted the book in 1984 under their Orion imprint. Petsco wrote the stories for his master's thesis at Brigham Young University (BYU). The book won the 1979 Association for Mormon Letters award for short fiction. The stories were adapted for theater and performed in 1983, but without BYU's endorsement.

Critical reception of the book was mostly positive, and the work was hailed as an important work by and about a Latter-day Saint written by someone raised outside the Wasatch Front. Reviewers remarked that the book used realism to show a truthful but sometimes painful picture of Mormonism.

The stories are centered around LDS missionaries in the Southern California mission in the late 1970s, with Mihaly Agyar being a central character.

Background

Richard Cracroft, an English professor at BYU, encouraged Petsco to study English and to write a creative thesis in the English master's program at BYU. Petsco cited David Evans as a major influence.[1] Petsco wrote Nothing Very Important for his 1977 MA thesis.[2] Initially, Petsco could not find a publisher for Nothing Very Important and self-published it in 1979.[3] The book was sold in Deseret Book in 1979.[4] Signature Books re-published it in 1984 under their Orion imprint.[5] Petsco taught composition at BYU as an adjunct professor after graduating with his MA in 1977.[6][1] His friend, Kathryn Clark-Spencer, did the artwork for the book.[1]

Theatrical production

Reception

References

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