My mistress's sparrow is dead Great love stories, from Chekhov to Munro

Book - 2008

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
New York, NY : Harper [2008]
Language
English
Other Authors
Jeffrey Eugenides (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xviii, 587 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780061240386
9780061240379
  • First love and other sorrows / Harold Brodkey
  • The lady with the little dog / Anton Chekhov
  • Love / Grace Paley
  • A rose for Emily / William Faulkner
  • The dead / James Joyce
  • Dirty wedding / Denis Johnson
  • Natasha / David Bezmozgis
  • Some other, better Otto / Deborah Eisenberg
  • The hitchhiking game / Milan Kundera
  • Lovers of their time / William Trevor
  • Mouche / Guy de Maupassant
  • The moon in its flight / Gilbert Sorrentino
  • Spring in Fialta / Vladimir Nabokov
  • How to be an other woman / Lorrie Moore
  • Yours / Mary Robison
  • The bad thing / David Gates
  • First love / Isaac Babel
  • Tonka / Robert Musil
  • Jon / George Saunders
  • Red rose, white rose / Eileen Chang
  • Fireworks / Richard Ford
  • We didn't / Stuart Dybek
  • Something that needs nothing / Miranda July
  • The magic barrel / Bernard Malamud
  • What we talk about when we talk about love / Raymond Carver
  • Innocence / Harold Brodkey
  • The bear came over the mountain / Alice Munro.
Review by Booklist Review

The title is a line from the Latin poet Catullus, who, as Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist turned editor Eugenides writes in his enticing introduction, was the first in the ancient world to write about a personal love affair in an extended way. Catullus inspired Eugenides to select superior short stories about obsessive, hopeless, taboo, absurd, everyday, and heart-crushing desire and loss. What bliss it is to find in one volume Faulkner's A Rose for Emily, Chekhov's Lady with the Little Dog, and perfect stories by Nabokov, Alice Munro, and William Trevor. Then there is Denis Johnson, whose love story involves an abortion and an overdose; Deborah Eisenberg's tender story of family woes and same-sex love; George Saunders' smart and creepy futuristic tale; Milan Kundera's chilling story of a lover's game gone wrong; riveting stories by Gilbert Sorrentino, Eileen Chang, Miranda July, and Raymond Carver; and two masterpieces by Harold Brodkey, one an astonishingly frank story of sexual initiation. A bewitching anthology with proceeds going to a nonprofit literacy organization and one love ruling all: the love of literature.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2007 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Pulitzer Prize winner Eugenides (Middlesex) has assembled something quite extraordinary here: a fascinating, consistently compelling, and superbly edited collection of short stories about romantic love. Part of the collection's appeal is its range and depth: at 600 pages, it offers gems and new discoveries at every turn. Readers move, for example, from Harold Brodkey's bawdy tribute to young love and orgasm in "Innocence" to Alice Munro's sober study of an aging philanderer's late-blooming love for his ailing wife in "The Bear Came Over the Mountain." There are classic love stories, e.g., James Joyce's "The Dead" and Anton Chekhov's "The Lady with the Little Dog," as well as more experimental, contemporary tales, e.g., Lorrie Moore's self-help-styled "How To Be an Other Woman" and George Saunders's dizzying, futuristic A Clockwork Orange-inflected world of trendSetters and tasteMakers in "Jon." Some of the best moments come from younger writers, who somehow manage to match the masters here step for step. An essential acquisition. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 10/1/07.]-Patrick Sullivan, Manchester Community Coll., CT (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

Eugenides (Middlesex, 2002, etc.) offers a perfect Valentine's Day gift for lovers of literary fiction. His witty introduction, which channels Roman love poet Catullus and woolgathers engagingly about the "perishable nature of love," is only the first among numerous pleasures that await the reader of this generously proportioned--only a cad would call it "fat"--gathering of 26 stories, written within the past 120 years. Inevitable choices include Anton Chekhov's wistful tale of compromised romantic opportunity, "Lady with the Little Dog"; James Joyce's incandescent, enormously moving elegy, "The Dead"; Vladimir Nabokov's ebulliently poetic "Spring in Fialta"; even, for heaven's sake, William Faulkner's exceedingly nasty gothic chiller, "A Rose for Emily." Other authors now securely ensconced as modern classics include Isaac Babel (do not, under any circumstances, overlook his wonderful "First Love"), Milan Kundera, William Trevor, Colette Eileen Chang and the demanding modernist Robert Musil, whose intricate, bleak "Tonka" embraces both a frustrating enigma and a wrenching emotional experience. Three contemporary masterpieces stand out: Raymond Carver's Hemingway-derived, nonetheless seminal "What We Talk About When We Talk About Love"; Deborah Eisenberg's sophisticated, ingenious character study, "Some Other, Better Otto"; and Alice Munro's heartbreaking portrayal of a woman lost to Alzheimer's and the husband who, in losing her love, is paradoxically elevated and transfigured by his grief, "The Bear Came Over the Mountain." Several pleasant surprises include Miranda July's cunningly plotted "Something That Needs Nothing"; Stuart Dybek's disturbingly acerbic "We Didn't"; David Bezmogis's (Philip) Roth-ian "Natasha"; and Gilbert Sorrentino's virtuosic deployment of sardonic and lyrical linked vignettes, "The Moon In Its Flight." One of the best anthologies of recent years, as well as commanding proof that its editor is as expert a reader and critic as he is a novelist. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

My Mistress's Sparrow Is Dead Great Love Stories, from Chekhov to Munro Introduction Jeffrey Eugenides 1: Lesbia's Sparrow The Latin poet Catullus was the first poet in the ancient world to write about a personal love affair in an extended way. Other poets treated the subject of "love," allowing the flushed cheeks or alabaster limbs of this or that inamorata to enter the frame of their poems, but it was Catullus who built his nugae , or trifles, around a single, near-obsessional passion for a woman whose entire presence, body and mind, fills the lines of his poetry. From the first excruciating moments of infatuation with the woman he called "Lesbia," through the torrid transports of physical love, to the betrayals that leave him stricken, Catullus told it all, and, in so doing, did more than anyone to create the form we recognize today as the love story. Gaius Catullus was born around 84 b.c., in Cisalpine Gaul, the son of a minor aristocrat and businessman with holdings in Spain and Asia Minor, and lived until roughly the age of thirty. It was as a very young man, then, that he found his way to poetry--and to Lesbia. Lesbia wasn't her real name. Her real name was Clodia. Classical scholars disagree over whether she was the Clodia married to the praetor Metellus Celer, infamous for her licentiousness and possible matricide. Lesbia might have been one of Clodia's sisters, or another Clodia altogether. What's certain is that she was married and that Catullus's relationship with her was adulterous. Though, like many adulterers, Catullus disapproved of adultery (in poem LXI he writes, "Your husband is not light, not tied/To some bad adulteress,/Nor pursuing shameful scandal/Will he wish to sleep apart/From your tender nipples,"), he found himself, in the case of Clodia/Lesbia, compelled to make an exception. He became involved with a wicked aristocratic Roman lady who used him as a plaything, or--the alternate version--he fell for a fashionable, married Roman girl, who ended up sleeping with his best friend, Rufus. Whatever the details, one thing is clear: a great love story had begun. Of Catullus's many hendecasyllabics devoted to his relationship with Lesbia, only two concern us here. The first two. The poems having to do with Lesbia and her pet sparrow. Sparrow, my girl's darling Whom she plays with, whom she cuddles, Whom she likes to tempt with finger- Tip and teases to nip harder When my own bright-eyed desire Fancies some endearing fun And a small solace for her pain, I suppose, so heavy passion then rests: Would I could play with you as she does And lighten the spirit's gloomy cares! That's poem II. Poem II A is a fragment. And by poem III Lesbia's sparrow is dead. "[P]asser mortuus est meae puellae,/passer, deliciae meae puellae,/quem plus illa oculis suis amabit," Catullus writes, which translates as, "My girl's sparrow is dead,/Sparrow, my girl's darling,/Whom she loved more than her eyes." (Incidentally, this poem, or more specifically, the onomatopoeia of its two central words, " passer " and " pipiabat ," did more than anything I can remember to make me want to become a writer. I can still hear our Latin teacher, Miss Ferguson, piping out in her most piercing sparrow's voice, " passer pipiabat ," getting us to notice how much the plosive rhythm resembled a bird singing. That words were music, that, at the same time they were marks on a page, they also referred to things in the world and, in skilled hands, took on properties of the things they denoted, was for me, at fifteen, an exciting discovery, all the more notable for the fact that this poetic effect had been devised by a young man dead for two thousand years, who'd sent this phrase drifting down the centuries to reach me in my Michigan classroom, filling my American ears with the sound of Roman birdsong.) But back to the poem. The pluperfect of " pipiabat " is elegiac: the bird "used to sing." Now its song has been silenced. Catullus, who in the previous poem had cause to wish the bird would fly away, now changes his mind. "Oh what a shame!" he writes. "O wretched sorrow! Your fault it is that now my girl's/Eyelids are swollen from crying." Things were bad with the sparrow around. They're bad with the sparrow gone. Nothing is keeping Lesbia from giving all her love to Catullus now. But Lesbia's no longer in the mood. Worse, her crying has ruined her looks. If Catullus gave us the confessional love story, these first two poems delineated its scope. The book you're holding in your hands, which takes its title from Catullus, is an anthology of love stories. They were all written in the past 120 years. There are translations from Russian, Chinese, French, Austrian, and Czech writers. There are stories by famous, dead writers and by young Americans, stories involving, as in Milan Kundera's "The Hitchhiking Game," two lovers taking a road trip in Communist-era Czechoslovakia, to the two terrifically well-groomed, adolescent "TrendSetters & TasteMakers" from the near future in George Saunders's "Jon," to the little Jewish boy in Isaac Babel's "First Love" who falls for the Christian neighbor who shelters him during a Russian pogrom. Despite the multiplicity of subjects and situations treated here, one Catullan requirement remains in force throughout. In each of these twenty-six love stories, either there is a sparrow or the sparrow is dead. 2: A labor of love At the behest of the energetic, unstoppable Dave Eggers (the Bono of Lit), I've been reading almost nothing but love stories for the past year. (Note: The entire proceeds of this anthology will go to support 826 Chicago, the literacy project here in Bucktown, and another labor of love.) In discovering and gathering these stories, my method has been maximally random and sociable. At lectures and book parties, in elevators with editors and at literary festivals with fellow novelists, on college campuses, in loud tapas bars, over a Delirium Tremens at the Hopleaf on Clark Street, I asked whoever happened to . . . My Mistress's Sparrow Is Dead Great Love Stories, from Chekhov to Munro . Copyright © by Jeffrey Eugenides. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold. Excerpted from My Mistress's Sparrow Is Dead: Great Love Stories, from Chekhov to Munro by Jeffrey Eugenides All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.