Humanities  /  Fiction
The Laughable Stories Collected by Mar Gregory John Bar-Hebraeus Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 402
ISBN: 9781593331238
Pub Date: 01 Jan 2004
Imprint: Gorgias Press
Description:
The first complete edition, containing 727 "laughable stories", by Bar-Hebraeus. It was the child of the compiler's old age, and says much for the broadmindedness and versatility of the learned Bar-Hebraeus.
Caesar's Column Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 340
ISBN: 9780819566669
Pub Date: 04 Dec 2003
Illustrations: 2 illus.
Description:
Published in 1890, Caesar's Column is an account of a trip to New York City in 1988 by a visitor from the Swiss colony of Uganda. The great metropolis dazzles with its futuristic technology, but its ostentatious wealth and luxury mask the brutal repression of the laboring classes by their rich bosses. The workers, aided by international terrorists, stage a violent revolt and the narrator flees the devastated city by airship to found an agrarian utopia in Africa.
Speed-Walk and Other Stories Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 184
ISBN: 9780822962472
Pub Date: 26 Oct 2003
Series: Drue Heinz Literature Prize
Description:
The characters in Speed-Walk and Other Stories often find themselves dislocated, living in places that do not resemble or feel like home. Their lives have somehow been turned on their axes, and often they cannot comprehend why. The stories in this stunning debut collection are united by their protagonists' common quest to make sense of the world, to bring it into focus, to set it right, to adapt.
Envisioning the Future Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 240
ISBN: 9780819566522
Pub Date: 03 Sep 2003
Illustrations: 3 illus.
Description:
In this unique collection of fiction and essays, some of the best writers in the science fiction world explore our relationship to the future through the dual lens of science fiction and cultural studies, and provide a rich testament to the power of science fiction to help us re-imagine reality.Each contributor was asked to reflect on our anxiety about the new millennium and to write about how science fiction could help us envision the far future and future cultural spaces. The resulting array of speculative writings, both critical and fictional, is diverse and illuminating-from a personal essay by Marge Piercy on love, sex and the power of fiction; to a new story by Harlan Ellison in which consumerism is the opiate of the masses; to a fictional book review by Kim Stanley Robinson which imagines what future historians will say about science in the third millennium.
Run Me a River Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 360
ISBN: 9780813190709
Pub Date: 01 Sep 2003
Illustrations: illus
Description:
The rich history of river life in Kentucky permeates Janice Holt Giles's novel Run Me a River. Set in 1861, at the beginning of Kentucky's reluctant entry into the Civil War, the novel tells the story of a five-day adventure on the Green River. Aboard the Rambler, a ramshackle steamboat, Captain Bohannon Cartwright and his crew journey 184 miles and pick up two extra passengers along the way.
A Stranger at the Door, And Other Lebanese Short Stories Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 116
ISBN: 9781931956321
Pub Date: 15 Aug 2003
Imprint: Gorgias Press
Description:
This charming collection of short stories is packed with humor, suspense, and shock, but is essentially serious. Through an array of interesting characters, Al-Khoury illuminates an extraordinary range of issues.
Deluge Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 393
ISBN: 9780819566607
Pub Date: 13 Aug 2003
Description:
First published in 1927, Deluge is one of the most famous of the English catastrophe novels. Beautifully written and action packed-RKO Radio Pictures even filmed this story-the novel depicts a flood so severe that it destroys modern civilization, leaving the few survivors to adapt to the rigors of the natural world. Like other English writers responding to the trauma of World War I, Sydney Fowler Wright expresses a loathing of the worst aspects of industrialization.
Cosmos Latinos Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 368
ISBN: 9780819566348
Pub Date: 31 Jul 2003
Description:
Opening a window onto a fascinating new world for English-speaking readers, this anthology offers popular and influential stories from over ten countries, chronologically ranging from 1862 to the present. Latin American and Spanish science fiction shares many thematic and stylistic elements with anglophone science fiction, but there are important differences: many downplay scientific plausibility, and others show the influence of the region's celebrated literary fantastic. In the 27 stories included in this anthology, a 16th-century conquistador is re-envisioned as a cosmonaut, Mexican factory workers receive pleasure-giving bio-implants, and warring bands of terrorists travel through time attempting to reverse the outcome of historical events.
Yielding Ice About to Melt Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 192
ISBN: 9780802313393
Pub Date: 07 Jul 2003
Imprint: Dufour Editions
Description:
Yielding Ice About to Melt awakens the reader to new, hidden, and forgotten perceptions. Using a prose that is pure yet intense, Richard Penna creates an enigmatic world that is at once in and yet out of our time, nudging our memory of ancient truths and shaking us into awareness of new beginnings. Thomas, a young doctor, has crossed a vast and heavily polluted river in order to live in a sparsely populated area on the edge of an impenetrable forest.
The Yellow Wave Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
ISBN: 9780819566324
Pub Date: 26 Jun 2003
Illustrations: 6 illus.
Description:
In Kenneth Mackay's 1895 admonitory tale, Britain's attention and military forces are diverted by a Russian attack on India, and Australia is left defenseless. The Russians lead the invasion force, but for readers of the Victorian Age, the real horror is the use of Chinese troops. This sweeping speculative story foreshadows the rapid growth of nationalism in the 20th Century.
20 Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 360
ISBN: 9780822958154
Pub Date: 02 Mar 2003
Series: Drue Heinz Literature Prize
Description:
The Drue Heinz Literature Prize was established in 1980 to encourage and support the writing and reading of short fiction. Over the past twenty years judges such as Robert Penn Warren, Raymond Carver, Joyce Carol Oates, Margaret Atwood, Russell Banks, Alice McDermott, and Frank Conroy have selected the best collections from the hundreds submitted annually by up-and-coming writers.20 represents the best of the best—one story from each of the prize-winning volumes.
The Last Man Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 220
ISBN: 9780819566089
Pub Date: 15 Jan 2003
Illustrations: 5 illus.
Description:
Originally published in French in 1805, The Last Man is a powerful story of the demise of the human race. Drawing on the traditional account in Revelations, The Last Man was the first end-of-the-world story in future fiction. As the first secular apocalypse story, The Last Man served as the departure point for many other speculative fictions of this type throughout the 19th century, including works by Shelley, Flammarion and Wells.
Behold Faith and Other Stories Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
ISBN: 9780802313386
Pub Date: 02 Dec 2002
Imprint: Dufour Editions
Description:
In sometimes humorous and sometimes tragic, even violent contexts, the characters in these stories struggle to fathom the complexities and circumstances of their lives. Here are ordinary people trying to come to grips with the implications of where they've been, and preparing themselves for where they're headed. All these stories seek to interrogate and render in genuine and unflinching ways the nature of doubt, delusion, and surprisingly, the potentially rescuing powers of faith and grace.
Home and Beyond Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 426
ISBN: 9780813190198
Pub Date: 01 Dec 2002
Description:
With an introduction by Wade HallMorris Grubbs has sifted through vintage classics, little-known gems, and stunning debuts to assemble this collection of forty stories by popular and critically acclaimed writers. In subtle and profound ways they challenge and overturn accepted stereotypes about the land their authors call home, whether by birth or by choice. Kentucky writers have produced some of the finest short stories published in the last fifty years, much of which focuses on the tension between the comforts of community and the siren-like lure of the outside world.
American Standard Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 192
ISBN: 9780822962441
Pub Date: 03 Nov 2002
Series: Drue Heinz Literature Prize
Description:
Winner of the 2002 Drue Heinz Literature PrizeSelected by Elizabeth HardwickIt is difficult to see what lurks beneath the surface of a muddy river, an alligator-infested lake, or a John Blair short story. The deep currents that drive a demure, devout, church-going woman to shoot her husband; the ripple effect of a midnight rendezvous at church youth camp that goes slightly—then horribly—askew; the sinkholes that can swallow Porsche dealerships—or marriages; what is dredged up in American Standard cannot easily be forgotten.Set mostly in central Florida, Blair’s stories are filled with people living lives of disquieting longing and stubborn isolation.
Yates Paul, His Grand Flights, His Tootings Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
ISBN: 9780813190358
Pub Date: 27 Sep 2002
Description:
James Baker Hall's blackly comic coming-of-age novel has been denied, by unfortunate circumstances surrounding its original 1964 publication, its rightful place alongside classics such as Catcher in the Rye and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest in the canon of essential late-twentieth-century American fiction.Set in Lexington, Kentucky, the story unfolds through the eyes of thirteen-year-old Yates Paul. He becomes consumed with revelations about his inattentive father's loneliness, his grandmother's stormy relationship with his boisterous alcoholic uncle, and the frustration of being the best photography assistant in town when no one else knows it.