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Not-Knowing : The Essays and Interviews by Donald Barthelme (1997, Hardcover)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherRandom House Publishing Group
ISBN-100679409831
ISBN-139780679409830
eBay Product ID (ePID)1127595

Product Key Features

Book TitleNot-Knowing : the Essays and Interviews
Publication Year1997
TopicGeneral, Essays
Number of PagesXviii, 332 Pages
LanguageEnglish
GenreFiction, Literary Collections
AuthorDonald Barthelme
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Weight22.4 Oz

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
LCCN97-009170
Dewey Edition22
Dewey Decimal814/.54
SynopsisDonald Barthelme's premature death at the age of fifty-eight brought to an end one of the most provocative careers in the history of American literature.  Groundbreaking works such as Come Back, Dr. Caligari; The Dead Father; Snow White; Great Days; Overnight to Many Distant Cities; Guilty Pleasures; and his two short-fiction collections, Forty Stories and Sixty Stories, have earned him a place among the most influential and imitated authors of the last half-century. With his marvelously strange and darkly ironic vision of the world, his wizard satire and deadpan humor, Barthelme spoke of and for our time like no one else. He spoke of our national obsessions and weirdnesses, our unspeakable practices and unnatural acts, in what is for many the distinctive voice of postmodern America. Not-Knowing is the second posthumous collection of Donald Barthelme's work. Like The Teachings of Don B. (1992), it brings together shorter works now almost impossible to come by. While the first volume featured the author's tantalizing experiments in satire, parable, fable, and playwriting, this new volume focuses on his diverse nonfiction pieces, collectively referred to here as essays, although, as always with Barthelme's work, they are feistily resistant to any label. Categorizable or not, Not-Knowing contains Barthelme's pungent comments on writing, art, literature, film, and city life, which are, as John Barth says in his Introduction, among the permanent literary treasures of American postmodernist writing. Also here are several interviews with the author--invaluable for understanding this very private man--including two never before available. The interviews range over the last eighteen years of Barthelme's life, and they give readers the opportunity to watch his ideas as they expand, change, and settle. Kim Herzinger has gathered here an eclectic selection of pieces for Barthelme's many admirers, creating a work that will confirm his rightful standing as, in the words of Robert Coover, "one of the great citizens of contemporary world letters."
LC Classification NumberPS3552.A76A6 1997