Seven Gothic Tales
Page 45
—John le Carré
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DEATH IN VENICE AND SEVEN
OTHER STORIES
by Thomas Mann
In addition to Death in Venice (“A story,” Mann said, “of death … of the voluptuousness of doom”), this volume includes “Mario the Magician,” “Disorder and Early Sorrow,” “A Man and His Dog,” “Felix Krull,” “The Blood of the Walsungs,” “Tristan,” and “Tonio Kröger.”
0-679-72206-8
LOLITA
by Vladimir Nabokov
The controversial novel that tells the story of the aging Humbert Humbert’s obsessive, devouring, and doomed passion for the nymphet Dolores Haze.
“The only convincing love story of our century.”
—Vanity Fair
0-679-72316-1
NO EXIT AND THREE OTHER PLAYS
by Jean-Paul Sartre
No Exit is an unforgettable portrayal of hell. The Flies is a modern reworking of the Electra-Orestes story. Dirty Hands is about a young intellectual torn between theory and praxis. The Respectful Prostitute is a scathing attack on American racism.
0-679-72516-4
THE PASSION
by Jeanette Winterson
Intertwining the destinies of two remarkable people—the soldier Henri, for eight years Napoleon’s faithful cook, and Villanelle, the red-haired daughter of a Venetian boatman—The Passion is “a deeply imagined and beautiful book, often arrestingly so” (The New York Times Book Review).
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ALSO BY ISAK DINESEN
ANECDOTES OF DESTINY AND EHRENGARD
In the classic “Babette’s Feast,” a mysterious French woman prepares a sumptuous feast for a gathering of religious ascetics and, in doing so, introduces them to the true essence of grace. In “The Immortal Story,” a miserly old tea-trader living in Canton wishes for power and finds redemption as he turns an oft-told sailors’ tale into reality for a young man and woman. And in the magnificent novella Ehrengard, Dinesen tells of the powerful yet restrained rapport between a noble Wagnerian beauty and a rakish artist. Hauntingly evoked and sensuously realized, the five stories and novella collected here have the hold of “fairy stories read in childhood … of dreams … and of our life as dreams” (The New York Times).
LAST TALES
Last Tales is a collection of twelve of the last tales that Isak Dinesen wrote before her death in 1962. They include seven tales from Albondocani, a projected novel that was never completed; “The Caryatids,” an unfinished Gothic tale of a couple bedeviled by an old letter and a gypsy’s spell; and three tales of winter, including “Converse at Night in Copenhagen,” a drunken, all-night conversation between a boy-king, a prostitute, and a poor young poet.
OUT OF AFRICA AND SHADOWS ON THE GRASS
At the age of twenty-seven; Isak Dinesen (née Karen Blixen) left Denmark and sailed for East Africa to marry her Swedish cousin, Baron Bror Blixen. Together they bought a four-thousand-acre coffee plantation in Kenya. From 1914 to 1931 she managed the plantation, even after she and her husband separated. Her account of those years is transformed by the magic of her prose and her supreme gift as a storyteller into a vibrant re-creation of Africa, filled with her affection for and understanding of the land and its people
SEVEN GOTHIC TALES
Originally published in 1934, Seven Gothic Tales, the first book by “one of the finest and most singular artists of our time” (The Atlantic), is a modern classic. Here are seven exquisite tales combining the keen psychological insight characteristic of the modern short story with the haunting mystery of the nineteenth-century Gothic tale, in the tradition of writers such as Goethe, Hoffmann, and Poe.
WINTER’S TALES
In Isak Dinesen’s universe, the magical enchantment of the fairy tale and the moral resonance of myth coexist with an unflinching grasp of the most obscure human strengths and weaknesses. A despairing author abandons his wife, but in the course of a long night’s wandering, he learns love’s true value and returns to her, only to find her a different woman from the one he left. A landowner, seeking to prove a principle, inadvertently exposes the ferocity of mother love. A wealthy young traveler melts the hauteur of a lovely woman by masquerading as her aged and loyal servant. Shimmering and haunting, Dinesen’s Winter’s Tales transport us, through their author’s deft guidance of our desire to imagine, to the mysterious place where all stories are born.
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