A Curtain of Green: And Other StoriesHMH, 1991 M11 7 - 320 páginas The debut short fiction collection from the Pulitzer Prize–winning Southern author: “A fine writer and a distinguished book” (The New Yorker). When A Curtain of Green was published, it immediately established an unknown young writer from Mississippi as a uniquely original literary voice and a great American author. In her now-famous introduction to the collection, Katherine Anne Porter wrote that “there is even in the smallest story a sense of power in reserve which makes me believe firmly that, splendid beginning that it is, it is only a beginning.” In this collection are many of the stories that have become acknowledged masterpieces: the hilarious over-the-top family drama that drives a small-town resentful postmistress to explain “Why I Live at the P.O.”; the deeply satisfying thwarting of a trio of busybodies by a “feeble-minded” young woman in “Lily Daw and the Three Ladies”; the poignant pilgrimage of elderly Phoenix Jackson in “A Worn Path”; and the boldly experimental and jubilantly playful literary improvisation of “Powerhouse,” inspired by a performance Eudora Welty saw by Fats Waller. Porter added that “[Welty] has simply an eye and an ear sharp, shrewd, and true as a tuning fork.” Like the jazz tunes Powerhouse bangs out on the piano, Welty’s stories remain as fresh, alive, and unpredictable today as when they first appeared. “Miss Welty’s stories are deceptively simple. They are concerned with ordinary people, but what happens to them and the manner of the telling are far from ordinary.”—The New Yorker |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 41
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... side of the street or on the other side," Mrs. Carson declared as they walked along. Ed Newton was stringing Redbird school tablets on the wire Lily Daw and the Three Ladies 5.
... side of the street or on the other side," Mrs. Carson declared as they walked along. Ed Newton was stringing Redbird school tablets on the wire Lily Daw and the Three Ladies 5.
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... side, toward the railroad, and the front steps were gone. The car full of ladies drew up under the cedar tree. "Now Lily's almost grown up," Mrs. Carson continued. "In fact, she's grown," she concluded, getting out. "Talking about ...
... side, toward the railroad, and the front steps were gone. The car full of ladies drew up under the cedar tree. "Now Lily's almost grown up," Mrs. Carson continued. "In fact, she's grown," she concluded, getting out. "Talking about ...
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... side of the tracks. The two ladies were going to travel as far as Jackson to help Lily change trains and be sure she went in the right direction. Lily sat between them on the plush seat with her hair combed and pinned up into a knot ...
... side of the tracks. The two ladies were going to travel as far as Jackson to help Lily change trains and be sure she went in the right direction. Lily sat between them on the plush seat with her hair combed and pinned up into a knot ...
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... dress to bury her in. He would have to dig a deep hole behind the house, under the cedar, a grave. He would have to nail her up a pine coffin and lay her in side. Then he would have to carry her to the t6 A Curtain of Green.
... dress to bury her in. He would have to dig a deep hole behind the house, under the cedar, a grave. He would have to nail her up a pine coffin and lay her in side. Then he would have to carry her to the t6 A Curtain of Green.
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And Other Stories Eudora Welty. side. Then he would have to carry her to the grave, lay her down and cover her up. All the time he would be wild, shouting, and all distracted, to think he could never touch her one more time. She moved ...
And Other Stories Eudora Welty. side. Then he would have to carry her to the grave, lay her down and cover her up. All the time he would be wild, shouting, and all distracted, to think he could never touch her one more time. She moved ...
Contenido
THE KEY | |
KEELA THE OUTCAST INDIAN MAIDEN | |
WHY I LIVE AT THE PO | |
THE WHISTLE | |
THE HITCHHIKERS | |
CLYTIE | |
OLD MR MARBLEHALL | |
FLOWERS FOR MARJORIE | |
A CURTAIN OF GREEN | |
A VISIT OF CHARITY | |
DEATH OF A TRAVELING SALESMAN | |
POWERHOUSE | |
A WORN PATH | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Aimee Slocum ain't asked began Bowman breath Carson cherry log child China Grove Clyde Clytie cried dark door dream dress Ellie Ellisville everything eyes face felt fingers Fletcher flowers freak show front girl goin guitar hair hand Harris head hear heard heart jumped knew ladies laughed leaned Leota Lethy light Lily lips listen Little Lee Roy looked Marblehall Marian married Miss Ferguson mouth moved Nelson Eddy never Niagara Falls nickelodeon nigger night Octavia old woman Papa-Daddy Phoenix Pike pocket porch Powerhouse rain remember Sara says Mama screamed seemed side Sister slowly smile some Sonny stared Stella-Rondo Steve stood stopped stories straight street suddenly talking tell thing thought took town tree turned Uncle Rondo voice W. B. Yeats waiting walked watch Watts window wondered xylophone yellow zinnias