I think you are talking about the American writer Raymond Carver (transliterated as Raymond Carver).
The following is his introduction:
Famous contemporary American short story writer and poet, born on May 25, 1938 in Claskany, Oregon, on August 2, 1988 Died of lung cancer. After graduating from high school, I supported my family, made a living, and studied writing in my spare time. In 1966, he received a Master of Arts degree from the University of Iowa. In 1967, his work was selected for the "Best American Novels of the Year" for the first time. After the 1970s, his writing achievements gradually attracted attention. In 1979, he won the Guggenheim Fellowship and twice the National Endowment for the Arts. In 1983, he won the Mildred Fellowship. ——Harold Strauss Lifetime Achievement Award; received the Levinson Award from Poetry Magazine in 1985; was nominated as a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1988, and received an honorary Doctor of Letters from the University of Hartford, as well as the Brand Sri Lanka Novel Award. Carver's life works are mainly short stories and poems, as well as some prose. His works mainly include the short story collection "Can You Please Be Quiet?" "(1976), "The Angry Season" (1977), "What We Say When We Talk About Love" (1981), "The Cathedral" (1983), "Where I Call" (1988) , poetry collections "Winter Insomnia" (1970), "Salmon Night Tracking" (1976), "Where the Seas Meet" (1985), "The Blue Sea" (1986), "A New Road to the Waterfall" ( 1989) etc.
Writing style: Minimalism
Minimalism
The earliest definition of Carver's work came from critic Heckinger, "the calmness of the surface, the theme The novelist Geoffrey Woolf more simply named Carver and his followers "subtractors." ". The charismatic "adder" John Bass gave the most convincing definition of "minimalist" literature in a mixed tone of love and hate: "The key criterion of minimalist aesthetics" Yes: extreme simplicity of artistic means can enhance the artistic effect of a work - harkening back to Robert Browning's famous saying 'less is more' - even if such parsimony threatens other literary and artistic values, such as integrity, Or the richness and precision of statements”
Representative works: “What We Talk About When We Talk About Love”, “Cathedral”