
Barthelme's works are known for their focus on the landscape of the New South. Along with his reputation as a minimalist, together with writers Raymond Carver, Ann Beattie, Amy Hempel, and Mary Robison, Barthelme's work has also been described by terms such as "dirty realism" and "K-mart realism."He published his first short story in The New Yorker,and has claimed that a rotisserie chicken helped him understand that he needed to write about ordinary people.He has moved away from the postmodern stylings of his older brother, Donald Barthelme, though his brother's influence can be seen in his earliest works, Rangoon and War and War. Barthelme was thirty-three year editor and visionary of Mississippi Review, known for recognizing and publishing once new talents such as Larry Brown, Curtis Sittenfeld, and Amy Hempel early in their careers.
Books

Bob the Gambler
1997

Works in Progress Number 7
1972

The Law of Averages
New and Selected Stories
2000

Moon Deluxe
1983

Chroma
1987

Painted Desert
1995

Tracer
1985

Elroy Nights
2003

Two Against One
1988

The Brothers
1993

Double Down
Reflections on Gambling and Loss
1999

Second Marriage
1984

There Must Be Some Mistake
2014

Natural Selection
1990

Waveland
2009