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A Century of Fiction in The New Yorker

A Century of Fiction in The New Yorker

Edited byĀ The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman, a celebratory selection from one hundred years of short stories in the magazine which has been the most influential and important showcase for the form and has launched dozens of stellar careers in fiction

There is simply no A–Z like the alphabet of fiction writers who have appeared in the pages ofĀ The New Yorker in the last hundred years. The book boasts inarguable classics like Salinger’s ā€œA Perfect Day for Bananafish,ā€ Annie Proulx’s ā€œBrokeback Mountain,ā€ and Shirley Jackson’s ā€œThe Lotteryā€ alongside stunners to be rediscovered. Some stories defined a moment or a now-lost world (Isaac Bashevis Singer’s ā€œThe Cafeteriaā€); others showed us a whole new way fiction could sound and feel (ā€œThe Red Girl,ā€ by Jamaica Kincaid).Ā 

With this vivid selection, Treisman showcases how our fiction has changed over time, and reminds us that past literary fashions continue to ripple outward in the fiction we love today. What does a Donald Barthelme mean to the craft of short fiction now? What will a Yiyun Li mean to the next generation of readers and writers? This exquisite tour of the form as practiced at its highest level will leap directly into the hearts of readers of all ages, all stripes, and is a beautiful tribute to the magazine's influence on our literary culture over the last century.

Ā 

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Ā 

Collaborators: New Yorker Magazine Inc (Author), Deborah Treisman (Editor)

Pages: 1152

Type: Hardcover

Item Number: 9780593801918

$50.00
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Edited byĀ The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman, a celebratory selection from one hundred years of short stories in the magazine which has been the most influential and important showcase for the form and has launched dozens of stellar careers in fiction

There is simply no A–Z like the alphabet of fiction writers who have appeared in the pages ofĀ The New Yorker in the last hundred years. The book boasts inarguable classics like Salinger’s ā€œA Perfect Day for Bananafish,ā€ Annie Proulx’s ā€œBrokeback Mountain,ā€ and Shirley Jackson’s ā€œThe Lotteryā€ alongside stunners to be rediscovered. Some stories defined a moment or a now-lost world (Isaac Bashevis Singer’s ā€œThe Cafeteriaā€); others showed us a whole new way fiction could sound and feel (ā€œThe Red Girl,ā€ by Jamaica Kincaid).Ā 

With this vivid selection, Treisman showcases how our fiction has changed over time, and reminds us that past literary fashions continue to ripple outward in the fiction we love today. What does a Donald Barthelme mean to the craft of short fiction now? What will a Yiyun Li mean to the next generation of readers and writers? This exquisite tour of the form as practiced at its highest level will leap directly into the hearts of readers of all ages, all stripes, and is a beautiful tribute to the magazine's influence on our literary culture over the last century.

Ā 

Get your Book Stamped for Free

Ā 

Collaborators: New Yorker Magazine Inc (Author), Deborah Treisman (Editor)

Pages: 1152

Type: Hardcover

Item Number: 9780593801918

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