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First published in 1968, In the Heart of the Heart of the Country established William Gass as one of America’s finest and boldest writers of fiction, and nearly fifty years later, the book still stands as a landmark of contemporary fiction. The two novellas and three short stories it contains are all set in the Midwest, and together they offer a mythical reimagining of America’s heartland, with its punishing extremes of heat and cold, its endless spaces and claustrophobic households, its hidden and baffled desires, its lurking threat of violence. Exploring and expanding the limits of the short story, Gass works magic with words, words that are as squirming, regal, and unexpected as the roaches, boys, icicles, neighbors, and neuroses that fill these pages, words that shock, dazzle, illumine, and delight.
Thirty years in the making, William Gass's second novel first appeared on the literary scene in 1995, at which time it was promptly hailed as an indisputable masterpiece. The story of a middle aged professor who, upon completion of his massive historical study, "Guilt and Innocence in Hitler's Germany," finds himself writing a novel about his own life instead of the introduction to his magnum opus. The Tunnel meditates on history, hatred, unhappiness, and, above all, language.
This volume provides a descriptive and informative guide to more than 100 sites of literary significance in the greater St Louis area, featuring historical and biographical information, maps, anecdotes, and photographs.
A dazzling new collectiontwo novellas and four short stories from one of the most revered writers of our time, author of seven books of fiction, among them The Tunnel (';An extraordinary achievement'Michael Dirda, The Washington Post); Middle C (';Exhilaratingly ingenious'Cynthia Ozick, The New York Times Book Review, cover); and Cartesian Sonata (';The finest prose stylist in America'The Washington Post). It begins with "e;In Camera,"e; the first of the two novellas, and tells the story, which grows darker and dustier by the speck, of a Mr. Gab (who doesn't have the gift) and his photography shop (in a part of town so drab even robbers wouldn't visit), a shop stuffed with gray-white, gray-bleach photographs, each in its own cellophane sheet, loosely side-filed in cardboard boxes, tag attached . . . an inner sanctum where little happens beyond the fulsome, deep reverence for Mr. Gab's images and vast collection, a homemade museum in the midst of the outer maelstrom . . . until a Mr. Stu (as in u-stew-pid) enters the shop, inspecting the extraordinary collection, and Mr. Gab's treasure-filled, dust-laden, meticulously contained universe begins to implode . . . In the story ';Don't Even Try, Sam,' the upright piano from the 1942 Warner Bros. classic Casablanca is interviewed (';I know why you want to talk to me,' the piano says. ';It's because everybody else is dead.Stars go out.Directors die. Companies fold.But some of the props get preserved.I've seen my friend the Vichy water bottle in the storeroom as wrapped up as the Maltese Falcon.We'd fetch a price now') . . . In another story, ';Charity,' a young lawyer, whose business it is to keep hospital equipment honestly produced, offers a simple gift and is brought to the ambiguous heart of charity itself. In ';Soliloquy for a Chair,' a folding chair does just thattalks in a barbershop that is ultimately bombed . . . and in ';The Toy Chest,' Disneylike creatures take on human roles and concerns and live in an atmosphere of a child's imagination.An enchanting Gassian journey; a glorious fantasia; a virtuoso delight.
"No one is better than William H. Gass at communicating the sublime and rapturous excitement of reading." Washington Post
Brackett Omensetter arrives, with his wife, family and belongings in the rural American town of Gilean. It swiftly becomes apparent that he is someone out of the ordinary, as he sets off a ground swell of violent emotions in the once tranquil commmunity. Who is he? What does he represent?
The greatly esteemed essayist, novelist, and philosopher reflects on the art of translation and on rainer maria rilke's duino elegies-and gives us his own translation of Rilke's masterwork.
From the writer the Washington Post calls "the finest prose stylist in America," a collection of masterly short fiction--his first in over 30 years.
"Gass's commitment to ideas, concentrated energy and originality shine through on every page. . . . Ezra Pound as a failed modernist; the lives of Nietzsche and Wittgenstein . . . the avant garde . . . the demands of autobiography; the Pulitzer Prize Committee's . . . choices in fiction . . . flecked with fertile insights and a pleasure to read".--PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, starred review. A 1996 National Book Critics Circle Award winner. 368 pp.
"No one is better than William H. Gass at communicating the sublime and rapturous excitement of reading." Washington Post
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