Johnson's short story oeuvre consists of two collections: ''
Jesus' Son (1992), comprising 11 works of short fiction, and The Largesse of the Sea Maiden'' (2018), published posthumously 25 years after his first collection and containing 5 stories. The volumes have elicited commentary by a number of critics on their respective styles and themes. Author David L. Ulin argues that the collections defy comparison. The stories in both collections are written exclusively from the
first-person point-of-view. While the pieces in ''Jesus' Son
are told by the same youthful narrator, a drug addict identified as "Fuckhead", The Largesse of the Sea Maiden'' presents a number of unique narrators. Several settings and characters appear in both collections. Critic Kevin Zambrano notes that "like "Beverly Home," "The Starlight on Idaho" takes its name from a rehab clinic, and Dundun, a character from Jesus' Son, reappears in "Strangler Bob" as part of a triad of jailhouse companions" in
The Largesse of the Sea Maiden. Three of the stories in the 2018 collection diverge from ''Jesus' Son'' in that Johnson presents "aging bourgeois professionals, dislocated less from society...Gone are flying women, flowers from Andromeda, crazy explanations for everything. What's left is a vast sense of bewilderment." Social critic Sandy English offers a similar assessment: Stylistically, Johnson maintains the same excellence in crafting his sentences. Critic Anthony Domestico writes: "The main thing linking
The Largesse of the Sea Maiden to ''Jesus's Son'' are his sentences...it's the sentences—those adamantine, poetic sentences—that made him one of America's great and lasting writers. It's the sentences that live on." Geoff Dyer admires "the slipshod magnificence and crazy wonder of the Johnsonian sentence. Clause by clause, word by word, anything becomes plausible." Kevin Zambrano qualifies his praise for Johnson's sentence structure: "More dissimilar than the collections' subject matter are their styles. Despite the greater length of the new stories [in
The Largesse of the Sea Maiden], Johnson's sentences have grown more economical, even prosaic." Zambrano suggests that Johnson has traded "brilliance" for "profundity" in these final stories. == Footnotes ==