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Showing 1 - 17 of 17 matches in All Departments
Joanna Scott, author of ten critically acclaimed novels, now turns her "incandescent imagination" (Publishers Weekly) back to the craft of the short story, with breathtaking results. Ranging across history from the distant past to the future, Scott tours the many forms our stories can take, from cave wall paintings to radio banter to digitized archives, and the far-reaching consequences of our communications. In Venice in the Late Middle Ages, a painter's apprentice finds a way to make his mark on canvases that will survive for centuries. In the near future, after the literary canon has been preserved only on the cloud and then lost, a scholar tries to piece together a little-known school of writers committed to using actual paper. In present day New England, a radio host invites his electrician to stay for dinner, opening up new narrative possibilities for both men. Written in prose so naturally elegant, smooth, and precise that it becomes invisible, Excuse Me While I Disappear asks what remains of our stories--as individuals and civilizations--after we are gone.
On a summer day in 1946 Sally Werner, the precocious young daughter
of hardscrabble Pennsylvania farmers, secretly accepts her cousin's
invitation to ride his new motorcycle. Like so much of what follows
in Sally's life, it's an impulsive decision with dramatic and
far-reaching consequences. Soon she abandons her home to begin a
daring journey of self-creation, the truth of which she entrusts
only with her granddaughter and namesake, six decades later. But
when young Sally's father--a man she has never known--enters her
life and offers another story altogether, she must uncover the
truth of her grandmother's secret history.
"A greatly gifted and highly original artist...Various Antidotes is
purely and simply wonderful."--"The New York Times Book Review"
In Joanna Scott's breakthrough novel the Austrian artist Egon
Schiele comes to prismatic life in a narrative that defies
convention, history, and identity. A self-professed genius and
student of August Klimt, Scott's Schiele repeatedly challenges the
boundaries of early twentieth-century Europe. Thrown in jail on
charges of immorality, Schiele's Mephistophelean reputation only
grows in stature until at the age of twenty-eight, the artist dies
in the Great Flu Pandemic. Told from a crosscurrent of voices,
viewpoints and times, this stunning novel won Scott a nomination
for the 1991 PEN/Faulkner Award.
The Manikin is not a mannequin, but the curious estate of Henry Craxton, Sr. in a rural western New York State. Dubbed the “Henry Ford of Natural History,” by 1917 Craxton has become America’s preeminent taxidermist. Into this magic box of a world—filled with eerily inanimate gibbons and bats, owls and peacocks, quetzals and crocodiles—wanders young Peg Griswood, daughter of Craxton’s newest housekeeper. Part coming-of-age story, part gothic mystery, and part exploration of the intimate embrace between art and life, The Manikin is compulsively readable and beautifully written.
The world of "Make Believe" into which we are drawn in this remarkable novel—hailed for both its lyrical prose and its profound dramatic and emotional intensity—is the world of four-year-old Bo, cast adrift in a sea of strangers as he becomes the focus of a fierce custody battle between two sets of grandparents, one black and one white. "The opening sections of Make Believe, which depict Bo's experience of the car accident that killed his mother and his new life with his paternal grandparents, are as powerful as anything the gifted Ms. Scott has written. They possess the unsettling intensity of Benjy's interior monologue in Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury. . . . The penultimate chapter, which sends Bo's life skidding off in yet another direction, contains a dazzling set piece that showcases all of Ms. Scott's virtuosic skills."
This universally acclaimed novel-everywhere hailed for its evocative descriptions, its compelling characters, its intricate plot-transports us to Elba, an island off the northwest coast of Italy, in the mid-1950s. It is here that an American man, seduced by the wealth promised in the island's surfeit of semiprecious tourmaline, has traveled with his wife and four young sons, and now struggles to establish a homestead and a fortune. But the allure of one of Elba's other treasures-a bewitching local girl-derails his quest and threatens to destroy his family.
Fictions of Art History, the most recent addition to the Clark Studies in the Visual Arts series, addresses art history's complex relationships with fiction, poetry, and creative writing. Inspired by a 2010 conference, the volume examines art historians' viewing practices and modes of writing. How, the contributors ask, are we to unravel the supposed facts of history from the fictions constructed in works of art? How do art historians employ or resist devices of fiction, and what are the effects of those choices on the reader? In styles by turns witty, elliptical, and plain-speaking, the essays in Fictions of Art History are fascinating and provocative critical interventions in art history. Distributed for the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute
Adriana Nardi is only ten years old when Allied forces occupy her lush island home during World War II, plaguing the quiet Italian village with violence and uncertainty. Amdu is a Senegalese soldier who abandons his comrades and befriends Adriana after witnessing an unspeakable act that has far-reaching repercussions. Years later, on a commuter train bound for Penn Station, sixty-year-old Adriana revisits her memories of the war and her doomed relationship with Amdu, even as a present crisis threatens her life.
At the seaside wedding of two lovers kept apart by the caprices of fate, a doting uncle looks on while his errant brother, father of the bride, struggles to free himself from a locked bathroom across town. A young woman arrives in Jazz Age New York with stars in her eyes and a few coins in her pocket and after a string of failed jobs, she thinks she's found salvation in a romance with her boss at a local greasy spoon but learns that her idea of herself and others' ideas of her are quite different. A bright business man seems content with all the trappings his good fortune affords, until a flat tire and a chance encounter with a couple of mechanics in the country upsets his entire view. Joanna Scott offers a group of tales that celebrate her acknowledged sense of character, plot and her gift for capturing the breathtaking tension even in life's quietest moments.
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