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My Sister's Hand in Mine: An Expanded Edition of the Collected Works of Jane Bowles
My Sister's Hand in Mine An Expanded Edition of the Collected Works of Jane Bowles
Author: Jane Bowles
Table of Contents: — --Two serious ladies — --In the summer house — --Plain pleasures: Plain pleasures — --Everything is nice — --A Guatemalan idyll — --Camp Cataract — --A day in the open — --A quarreling pair — --A stick of green candy — Other stories: — --Andrew — --Emmy Moore's journal — --Going to Massachusetts — From the notebooks: — --The ...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780912946443
ISBN-10: 091294644X
Publication Date: 1/1978
Pages: 476
Rating:
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
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3.8 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: Ecco Pr
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
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Though she wrote only one novella, one short play, and fewer than a dozen short stories over a roughly twenty-year span from the early 1940s to the mid-1960s, Jane Bowles has long been regarded by critics as one of the premier stylists of her generation. Enlivened at unexpected moments by sexual exploration, mysticism, and flashes of wit alternately dry and hilarious, her prose is spare and honed, her stories filled with subtly sly characterizations of men and, mostly, women, dissatisfied not so much with the downward spiral of their fortunes as with the hollowness of their neat little lives. Whether focused on the separate emergences of Miss Goering and Mrs. Copperfield from their affluent, airless lives in New York and Panama into a less defined but intense sexual and social maelstrom in the novella "Two Serious Ladies, or on the doomed efforts of the neighbors Mr. Drake and Mrs. Perry to form a connection out of their very different loneliness in "Plain Pleasures," or on the bittersweet cultural collision of an American wife and a peasant woman in Morocco in "Everything Is Nice," Jane Bowles creates whole worlds out of the unexpressed longings of individuals, adrift in their own lives, whether residing in their childhood homes or in faraway lands that are somehow both stranger and more familiar than what they left behind.