An edition of The stories of Paul Bowles (2001)

The stories of Paul Bowles

1st ed.
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Last edited by MARC Bot
November 14, 2023 | History
An edition of The stories of Paul Bowles (2001)

The stories of Paul Bowles

1st ed.
  • 0 Ratings
  • 3 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

An American literary cult figure, Paul Bowles established his legacy with the novel The Sheltering Sky. An immediate sensation, it became a fixture in American letters. Bowles then returned his energies to the short story -- the genre he preferred and soon mastered.

Bowles's short fiction is orchestral in composition and exacting in theme, marked by a unique, delicately spare style and a dark, rich, exotic mood, by turns chilling, ironic, and wry. In "Pastor Dowe at Tacaté," a Protestant missionary is sent to the far reaches of the globe -- a place, he discovers, where his God has no power. In "Call at Corazón," an American husband abandons his alcoholic wife on their honeymoon in a South American jungle. In "Allal," a boy's drug-induced metamorphosis into a deadly serpent leads to his violent death, but not before he feels the "joy" of sinking his fangs into human prey. Also gathered here are Bowles's most famous works, such as "The Delicate Prey," a grimly satisfying tale of vengeance, and "A Distant Episode," which Tennessee Williams proclaimed "a masterpiece of short fiction."

"Beauty and terror go wonderfully well together in [Bowles's] work," Madison Smartt Bell once said. Though sometimes shocking, Bowles's stories have a symmetry that is haunting and ultimately moral. Like Poe (whose stories Bowles's mother read to him at bedtime), Bowles had an instinctive adeptness with the nightmare vision. Joyce Carol Oates, in her introduction to Too Far from Home, writes that his characters are "at the mercy of buried wishes experienced as external fate." In these masterful stories, our deepest fears are manifest, tables are turned, and allegiances are tested. Fate is an inexorable element of Bowles's distant landscapes, and its psychological effects on his characters are rendered with penetrating accuracy. Like Hemingway, Bowles is famously unsentimental, a skilled craftsman of crystalline prose.

Publish Date
Publisher
Ecco Press
Language
English
Pages
657

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: The stories of Paul Bowles
The stories of Paul Bowles
2001, Ecco Press
in English - 1st ed.

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Published in
New York
Genre
Fiction.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
813/.54
Library of Congress
PS3552.O874 A6 2001, PS3552.O874A6 2001

The Physical Object

Pagination
xii, 657 p. ;
Number of pages
657

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL3953420M
Internet Archive
storiesofpaulbow00bowl
ISBN 10
0066212731
LCCN
2001051231
OCLC/WorldCat
48045961
Library Thing
356015
Goodreads
2077368

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON
November 14, 2023 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
December 26, 2021 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
February 14, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot remove fake subjects
July 22, 2017 Edited by Mek adding subject: In library
December 9, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page