Review by Booklist Review
Bowles was born in New York City in 1910 and died in 1999. He lived a long time in Morocco, a country with which he will always be identified, for Moroccan atmosphere and customs imbued his novels as well as the short stories upon which his literary reputation most firmly rests. In 1968 he co-founded Antaeus literary review with Daniel Halpern, and the magazine soon grew into Ecco Press. To coincide with its thirtieth anniversary, Ecco has compiled the first complete collection of Bowles' short stories. Not surprisingly, Morocco provides the setting for his two masterpieces, "The Delicate Prey," a shocking tale about three tribesmen crossing remote and hostile terrain, and "A Distant Episode," an equally disturbing story about a professor who is cruelly made the mutilated toy of desert nomads. The clash of alien and native cultures is a predominant theme found in Bowles' stories, worked out in various plot situations but always rendered in his trademark lucid, direct style. A necessary purchase for all active literature collections. --Brad Hooper
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
As elusive as his enigmatic fiction, which is epitomized by the 1949 autobiographical bestselling novel, The Sheltering Sky, Bowles (1910-2001) arguably has been venerated as much for being the mythical forerunner of the Beat Generation as for his considerable genius, both musical and literary. A darling of iconoclastic literati both here and abroad, he first became known as a composer, writing music for stage and screen. Only after his marriage to Jane Auer (herself soon to become a cultishly popular writer under the name Jane Bowles) in 1938 did he turn seriously to fiction. The exotic settings of the 62 stories collected in this landmark volume reflect the wanderings of nomadic Paul and Jane as, during the '30s and '40s, they flitted from Europe to Mexico, the Caribbean and the U.S. before finally settling in Tangiers in 1949. Over the years, Bowles's fascination with Western man's intrinsic decadence, laid bare in clashes with exotic cultures, became the signature motif of his existential fiction ("The Hours After Noon" and "Too Far from Home"). His oblique language and abrupt endings ("At Paso Rojo") are curiously confounding, and his tales are invariably charged with subterranean currents. Frankly incestuous and homosexual, "Pages from Cold Point" is almost certain to stir anew speculation about Bowles's sexual orientation. Earthy, violent and comfortable with corruption, these deeply affecting stories are distinguished by their lyrical rhythms and meticulous regard for language. The assemblage of this impressive collection marks a literary event of the highest order. (Oct.) Forecast: This definitive volume will be a must-have for all major libraries, and should attract much review attention and feature coverage. Bowles cofounded Antaeus magazine with Daniel Halpern in 1968, and soon afterward the magazine became the Ecco Press. This collection is being published to coincide with Ecco's 30th anniversary, and publisher Halpern will be available to discuss his longtime friendship with Bowles. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
A definitive collection of the enigmatic master's short fiction. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Lavish first collected edition of Bowles's harsh, unsparing short fiction-published in conjunction with Ecco's 30th anniversary: 62 elegantly wrought, compact nightmare visions, including the contents of classic earlier volumes, The Delicate Prey (1950) and The Time of Friendship (1967). Bowles (1910-99) was the ultimate American expatriate writer (Robert Stone's judicious introduction identifies him as "a cosmopolite who bridged the worlds of Gertrude Stein and Allen Ginsberg"): a longtime resident of Tangier, where he held court for numerous contemporaries and acolytes (many Beat Generation charter members among them), composed the music for which he's also justly famous, and wrote pungent tales of Western values corrupted and consumed by the amoral appetite of impoverished, pre-literate Latin American and (especially) North African cultures. A limpid understated style and a gimlet eye for human weakness and folly are the hallmarks of such bleak fictional marvels as "The Delicate Prey" and "A Distant Episode" (in which the Moroccan desert seems itself a vengeful cannibalistic entity), a chillingly urbane account of the violation of an ultimate sexual taboo ("Pages from Cold Point"), a withering satire on misguided "civilizing" impulses ("Pastor Dowe at Tacate"), and the troublingly enigmatic fablelike stories of Bowles's highly interesting (if uneven) later (1981) collection, Midnight Mass. A few of the early stories are, arguably, apprentice work, and several written in the 1980s (notably "Hugh Harper"and "Dinner at Sir Nigel's") feel like scarcely dramatized retreads. On the other hand, don't miss "Too Far from Home" (1993), another bitter black comedy about Western innocents adrift in the Sahara that conjures up images of both Bowles's surpassingly strange marriage to neurasthenic novelist Jane Bowles (who predeceased him by decades) and the psychosexual labyrinth explored in his famous first novel, The Sheltering Sky. Bowles was a great writer whom many readers may find hard to stomach (imagine a collaboration among Tennessee Williams, Andre Gide, and the Marquis de Sade). Those attuned to his hammer-blow rhetoric and nihilistic lyricism should find this generous volume just about irresistible.
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