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Human Country

New and Collected Stories

Harry Mathews

$37.95

Paperback

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English
Dalkey Archive Press
17 October 2002
Available For The First Time In One Volume, The Very Best Of Mathews's Short Fiction; This expertly designed original paperback presents a comprehensive collection of internationally renowned poet and novelist Harry Mathews' short prose. From the hilarious 'The Broadcast, ' in which the narrator learns from a radio program that everything he needs in life should fit into one sock, to 'Calibration of Latitude, ' which follows Sir Joseph Pernican on a meandering and seemingly aimless but deeply moving journey, this is a long-awaited addition to Mathew's beloved and masterful canon.
By:  
Imprint:   Dalkey Archive Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 162mm,  Spine: 13mm
Weight:   249g
ISBN:   9781564783219
ISBN 10:   1564783219
Series:   American Literature (Dalkey Archive)
Pages:   186
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Harry Mathews has written over a dozen books, including the novels Cigarettes and Tlooth, along with his collected essays, The Case of the Persevering Maltese. Mathews is a member of the Oulipo--France's longest-lived and most active literary group. He divides his time between Paris, Key West, and New York.

Reviews for Human Country: New and Collected Stories

A sheaf of Mathews's artifacts from the past twenty years or so, perhaps only for connoisseurs of the gold-packed sentence, including early stories from Country Cooking (1980), midcareer stories from The American Experience (1984), plus ten fresh new pieces (Singular Pleasures, 1993). The collection opens gloriously with a story not for everyone, a factual fiction that flows from Mathews's 1952 Harvard degree in music: 1980's Tradition and the Individual Talent: The 'Bratislava Spicatto' -a cellular fantasia on late-romantic conductors, composers, artists, and their familial crossbreeding (the floating affinity of who's related to whom), which tells of the invention of the Russian mode of unplucked pizzicato bowing on the violin-or maybe we've got that wrong, but, aside from its convivial linguistics as it follows the webbings of talent among musical artists, it bears no tie to T.S. Eliot's famous 1922 essay of the same name (minus the subcolonnic The 'Brataslava Spiccato' ). The Dialect of the Tribe gives a supremely tortuous look into Pagolak, the language of a remote New Guinea tribe that refuses to translate and, indeed, means to be untranslatable, unless you approach it with a ripeness as for dying -and even that won't be enough. Country Cooking from Central France: Roast Boned Rolled Stuffed Shoulder of Lamb (Farce Double) is quite likely the best satire on cookbooks ever written and focuses on shoulder of lamb with double stuffing (farce double). The Taxidermist tells of a woman who charges a flat rate and, when done, tips up the flag of her antique taxi meter on her bedside table. One cannot read all these stories at once, however brief the book, and couldn't even at half this length. The mind can hold just so much surrealism at a time before it waddles about doubly stuffed with farce double. Hairpin turns on Piranesi paragraphs that often climb nowhere and twist the brain into taffy. Wonder full. (Kirkus Reviews)


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