Bookbot

Slow Learner

Valutazione del libro

Maggiori informazioni sul libro

Long before Thomas Pynchon published his famous novel V. and radically changed the shape of literature in our century, he was writing stories—inventive, wonderfully imagined short fiction that startled and delighted readers fortunate enough to find them among the pages of Kenyon Review or The Noble Savage. Now, for the first time, five of these stories have been collected in book form, as Slow Learner. "The Small Rain," "Low-Lands," "Entropy," "Under the Small Rain," and The Secret Integration," all written between 1958 and 1964, appear here together with Pynchon's own very candid and surprisingly personal introduction. In it Pynchon reveals how he came to write each work and how he now views the young author he was then, making this volume more than a collection of stories, but a rare and fascinating self-portrait of an intensely private man.

Acquisto del libro

Slow Learner, Thomas Pynchon

Lingua
Pubblicato
1985
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(In brossura)
Non disponiamo più di questa copia specifica.
o
Visualizza l'edizione disponibile

Metodi di pagamento

3,4
Ok
62 Valutazioni

Qui potrebbe esserci la tua recensione.

Lingua
Inglese
Editore
Bantam
Pubblicato
1985
Formato
In brossura
Pagine
240
ISBN10
0553249622
ISBN13
9780553249620
Serie
Prima pubblicazione
1984
Titolo originale
Slow Learner
Valutazione
3,35 su 5
Descrizione
Long before Thomas Pynchon published his famous novel V. and radically changed the shape of literature in our century, he was writing stories—inventive, wonderfully imagined short fiction that startled and delighted readers fortunate enough to find them among the pages of Kenyon Review or The Noble Savage. Now, for the first time, five of these stories have been collected in book form, as Slow Learner. "The Small Rain," "Low-Lands," "Entropy," "Under the Small Rain," and The Secret Integration," all written between 1958 and 1964, appear here together with Pynchon's own very candid and surprisingly personal introduction. In it Pynchon reveals how he came to write each work and how he now views the young author he was then, making this volume more than a collection of stories, but a rare and fascinating self-portrait of an intensely private man.