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Conventional fiction

 Subject
Subject Source: Sackner Database

Found in 12 Collections and/or Records:

Middle C, 2013

 Item
Identifier: CC-56658-10000053
Scope and Contents Amazon.com A literary event"”the long-awaited novel, almost two decades in work, by the acclaimed author of The Tunnel ("The most beautiful, most complex, most disturbing novel to be published in my lifetime.""”Michael Silverblatt, Los Angeles Times; "An extraordinary achievement""”Michael Dirda, The Washington Post); Omensetter's Luck ("The most important work of fiction by an American in this literary generation""”Richard Gilman, The New Republic); Willie Masters' Lonesome Wife; and In the Heart of the Heart of the Country ("These stories scrape the nerve and pierce the heart. They also replenish the language.""”Eliot Fremont-Smith, The New York Times). Gass's new novel moves from World War II Europe to a small town in postwar Ohio. In a series of variations, Gass gives us a mosaic of a life"”futile, comic, anarchic"”arranged in an array of vocabularies, altered rhythms, forms and tones, and broken pieces with music as both theme and structure, set in the key of middle C. It...
Dates: 2013

No.23: Literary First Editions / Lame Duck Books ; Burroughs WS ; Finlay IH ; Gass W ; Desnos R ; Vollmann W ; Warhol A ; Zukofsky L., 1996

 Item
Identifier: CC-07677-7827
Scope and Contents

Lists three typed and signed letters by Ian Hamilton Finlay that are dated 1981 priced at $375. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1996

No.30: Advance Copy / Davies, Jordan ; Burroughs WS ; Smith WJ ; Gass W ; Rothenberg J ; Williams J ; Patchen K ; Hamady W ; Olson T ; Nuttall J., 1985

 Item
Identifier: CC-14834-15147
Scope and Contents

Jordan Davies has noted "very unusual & peculiar ephemeral material here - especially My Own Mag." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1985

The Tunnel, 1995

 Item
Identifier: CC-10643-10852
Scope and Contents This novel deals with self-revelations of an American academic who is trying to write an introduction for a book that he has just completed, "Guilt and Innocence in Hutler's Germany." The book can be opened to almost any page and read as fragments of self-contained poetry. It has many Joycean elements in its presentation.Reviews in Dalkey Archive at their Web site:by H. L. HixWilliam H. Gass's The Tunnel, whatever its virtues, is not an inviting book. Even a reader willing to endure its length and its narrator's unrelenting bitterness must overcome its subordination of plot to other concerns: the book does not proceed from a to b along a "straight line" of narrative or exposition, revealing all relevant information before or as it is needed, but moves in a less ordered (or differently ordered) way that its author conceives as a more accurate replication of human consciousness. Its releasing and withholding information with little regard for plot means that The Tunnel offers more to...
Dates: 1995

The Tunnel, 1995

 Item
Identifier: CC-10644-10853
Scope and Contents

This novel deals with self-revelations of an American academic who is trying to write an introduction for a book that he has just completed, "Guilt and Innocence in Hutler's Germany." The book can be opened to almost any page and read as fragments of self-contained poetry. It has many Joycean elements in its presentation. This version of the book has a collaged yellow Jewish star on page 30 with the inscription "JUDE" whereas the purchased version on its release did not. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1995