Author:Katherine Anne Porter,Sarah Churchwell
From the gothic Old South to revolutionary Mexico, few writers have evoked such a multitude of worlds, both exterior and interior, as powerfully as Katherine Anne Porter. This collection gathers together the best of her Pulitzer Prize-winning short fiction, including 'Pale Horse, Pale Rider', where a young woman lies in a fever during the influenza epidemic, her childhood memories mingling with fears for her fiancé on his way to war, and 'Noon Wine', a haunting story of tragedy and scandal on a small dairy farm in Texas. In all of the compelling stories collected here, harsh and tragic truths are expressed in prose both brilliantand precise.
Katherine Anne Porter's short stories are unsurpassed in modern fiction
—— Robert PennPorter writes English of a purity and precision almost unique in contemporary fiction
—— Edmund WilsonShe solves the essential problem: how to satisfy exhaustively in writing briefly
—— V.S. PritchettPorter's stories take accurate and deadly aim... dazzling
—— The New York TimesMurakami is a unique writer, at once restrained and raw, plainspoken and poetic
—— Washington PostA neat, yet somehow insanely generous collection..ruthless honesty, a faintly feminine openness, a seeming ability to find beauty and even glory in the banal, the urban, the modern... [the story] 'Honey Pie' isn't just a love story. It's a piece of writing about the threads and snags of time, the tangles, the way things pan out and why. I couldn't even begin to explain why I find it quite so moving and, in a sense, that's Murakami's magic. He speaks to a place so deep inside us that we can scarcely even reply
—— Daily TelegraphBeautifully nuanced stories, realistic snapshots of modern Japan enclosed in a fictional world that is seemingly trivial, but loaded with portent
—— IndependentA really imaginative collection where all the stories are intertwined and mysterious in that Murakami way
—— ObserverMurakami's storytelling inspires intimacy. It's the particular kind of intimacy that can evolve between a reader and a book, unspoken and unexpected, familiar, satisfying, strange.
—— JANE MENDELSOHN , Village VoiceEven in the slipperiest of Mr Murakami's stories, pinpoints of detail flash out warm with life.
—— New York TimesMurakami is one of the best writers around.
—— Time OutMurakami is a true original and yet in many ways he is also Franz Kafka's successor because he seems to have the intelligence to know what Kafka truly was - a comic writer.
—— Sunday Herald