Best of
American-Fiction
1952
Street of No Return
David Goodis - 1952
Once upon a time Whitey was a crooner with a million-dollar voice and a standing invitation from any woman who heard him use it. Until he had the bad luck to fall for Celia. And then nothing would ever be the same.In Street of No Return, David Goodis works the magic that made him one of the most distinctive voices in hard-boiled fiction, creating a claustrophobic universe in which wounded men and women collide with cataclysmic force.
Matador
Barnaby Conrad - 1952
The city of Sevilla waits, heavy with anticipation. But Pacote finds he is afraid, and fears disgrace in the ring. Time, once his friend, now presses him on to the moment when the gate opens and the first bull enters the ring. You are there in the stands with the screaming crowd and in the lonely emptiness at the center of the arena with only a red cap and a slender sword. You are there for one of the most magnificent passages ever written on bullfighting. "Conrad, himself a veteran of the bull ring, knows the sport even better than Hemingway. And he writes about it magnificently...a tale of high courage, throbbing with excitement." (B-O-M-C News)
All the Time in the World
Arthur C. Clarke - 1952
But who's behind it? Clarke's 1952 novel is read by Nicholas Boulton.
Kentucky is My Land
Jesse Stuart - 1952
A collection of poems centered on family, home, freedom, and work by a Kentuckian convinced that his native state is the heart of the nation.