Best of
Short-Stories

1989

The Book of Embraces


Eduardo Galeano - 1989
    Parable, paradox, anecdote, dream, and autobiography blend into an exuberant world view and affirmation of human possibility.

Nostalgia


Mircea Cărtărescu - 1989
    This translation of his 1989 novel Nostalgia, writes Andrei Codrescu, "introduces to English a writer who has always had a place reserved for him in a constellation that includes the Brothers Grimm, Franz Kafka, Jorge Luis Borges, Bruno Schulz, Julio Cortazar, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Milan Kundera, and Milorad Pavic, to mention just a few." Like most of his literary contemporaries of the avant-garde Eighties Generation, his major work has been translated into several European languages, with the notable exception, until now, of English.Readers opening the pages of Nostalgia should brace themselves for a verbal tidal wave of the imagination that will wash away previous ideas of what a novel is or ought to be. Although each of its five chapters is separate and stands alone, a thematic, even mesmeric harmony finds itself in children's games, the music of the spheres, humankind's primordial myth-making, the origins of the universe, and in the dilapidated tenement blocks of an apocalyptic Bucharest during the years of communist dictatorship.

Foundation's Friends


Martin H. GreenbergGeorge Alec Effinger - 1989
    Original tales by such science fiction luminaries as Orson Scott Card, Harry Turtledove, and Connie Willis, written in honor of Isaac Asimov's fiftieth anniversary in the genre, are set in one of his fictional universes.

Sherlock Holmes Short Stories


Clare West - 1989
    He sits in his room, and smokes his pipe. He listens, and watches, and thinks. He listens to the steps coming up the stairs; he watches the door opening - and he knows what question the stranger will ask. In these three of his best stories, Holmes has three visitors to the famous flat in Baker Street - visitors who bring their troubles to the only man in the world who can help them.

Time Stops at Shamli and Other Stories


Ruskin Bond - 1989
    For over four decades, by way of innumerable novels, essays, short stories and poems, the author has mapped out and peopled a unique literary landscape. This anthology has selections from all of his major books and includes the classic novella Delhi Is Not Far.

Angels and Visitations: A Miscellany


Neil Gaiman - 1989
    Craig Russell, Jill Carla Schwarz, Michael Zulli, and Rrandy Broecker.

Book of the Dead


John SkippBrian Hodge - 1989
    Romero reminds us, “There was a collection of stories called Book of the Dead, in which horror and science-fiction writers came together and wrote short stories about what was happening to other people on that first night (as depicted) in Night of the Living Dead.” Noted authors such as Joe R. Lansdale, Stephen King, Robert R. McCammon, and Douglas E. Winter use their macabre vision to bring us those stories. Forwarded by the Godfather himself, this anthology imbeds itself in the cannon of zombie lore.

Collected Stories, Vol. 1


Richard Matheson - 1989
    We will be publishing it in 3 volumes, the first in 2003 and one each year following.RICHARD MATHESON: COLLECTED STORIES is the gathering together of 86 Richard Matheson short stories, beginning with Born of Man and Woman from 1950 and ending with Duel from 1971. The stories were arranged by Matheson himself roughly in chronological order of original publication. There are also several tributes to Richard Matheson throughout the volumes from admirers such as Stephen King, Ray Bradbury, Robert Bloch, William F. Nolan, and others. Finally, Matheson wrote a deeply revealing Introduction for the collection. As Matheson himself states in this Introduction, "A twenty-year period of creativity reduced to the psychological background of my output of fantasy and science-fiction stories. If this were a thesis, that would be my premise".For the Volume One, editor Stanley Wiater has included:> A "bibliophile" at the end of each story containing Matheson's very own commentary on the behind-the-scenes details of each story. Each story is also listed with it's original publication date and place of publication.> A brand new introduction written expressly for this version of the bookEach subsequent volume of RICHARD MATHESON: COLLECTED STORIES that we publish will include the Matheson bibliophiles with each story.

By Bizarre Hands


Joe R. Lansdale - 1989
    Lansdale is your man. In his first collection of short stories, the gruseome and outrageous cult classic "The Drive-In" pilots a wildly thrilling, violent and vivid roller coaster ride to Hell and beyond...plumbing the eerie depths of his remarkable imagination to create horrors unique and unsettling - dark products of twisted genius that weave the grisly fabric of nightmares. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED! (back cover copy)CONTENTSFish NightThe PitDuck HuntBy Bizarre HandsThe Steel ValentineI Tell You It's LoveLetters From The SOuth, Two Moons South Of NacogdochesBoys Will Be BoysThe Fat Man And The ElephantHell Through A WindshieldDown By The Sea Near The Great Big RockTrains Not TakenTight Little Stitches In A Dead Man's BackThe Windstorm PassesNight They Missed The Horror ShowOn The Far Side Of The Cadillac Desert With Dead Folk

The Watch


Rick Bass - 1989
    Rooted in the creative traditions of the South, his stories introduce us to men who belong— in spirit if not always in fact— to the American outback, to the deserts of Utah, the swamps of Mississippi, the remote ranges of the Rockies. Strong and inventive, funny and lyrical, these luminous tales stir the heart with wonder as they resonate with hard-won truths. With a title story that is “an American classic” (Newsweek), The Watch is a landmark in contemporary short fiction.

Beauty and the Beast and Other Classic French Fairy Tales


Jack D. Zipes - 1989
    Readers experience the unique charm of this story in its original form--as a 17th century French fairy tale! This Signet Classic edition also contains other beloved tales, such as "Cinderella", "Sleeping Beauty", "Little Red Riding Hood", and "Puss in Boots", conveying all the excitement and timeless appeal to forever keep and cherish.

Tales from 1,001 Nights


Anonymous - 1989
    To end this brutal pattern and to save her own life, the vizier's daughter, Shahrazad, begins to tell the king tales of adventure, love, riches and wonder - tales of mystical lands peopled with princes and hunchbacks, the Angel of Death and magical spirits, tales of the voyages of Sindbad, of Ali Baba's outwitting a band of forty thieves and of jinnis trapped in rings and in lamps. The sequence of stories will last 1,001 nights.

The Complete Shorter Fiction of Virginia Woolf


Virginia Woolf - 1989
    This collection of nearly fifty pieces brings together the contents of two published volumes, A Haunted House and Mrs. Dalloway’s Party; a number of uncollected stories; and several previously unpublished pieces. Edited and with an Introduction by Susan Dick.

The Stories of Eva Luna


Isabel Allende - 1989
    In 1988, she introduced the world to Eva Luna in a novel of the same name that recounted the adventurous life of a young Latin American woman whose powers as a storyteller bring her friendship and love. Returning to this tale, Allende presents The Stories of Eva Luna, a treasure trove of brilliantly crafted stories. Lying in bed with her European lover, refugee and journalist Rolf Carlé, Eva answers his request for a story "you have never told anyone before" with these twenty-three samples of her vibrant artistry. Interweaving the real and the magical, she explores love, vengeance, compassion, and the strengths of women, creating a world that is at once poignantly familiar and intriguingly new. Two words --Wicked girl --Clarisa --Toad's mouth --The gold of Tomás Vargas --If you touched my heart --Gift for a sweetheart --Tosca --Walimai --Ester Lucero --Simple María --Our secret --The little Heidelberg --The judge's wife --The road north --The schoolteacher's guest --The proper respect --Interminable life --A discreet miracle --Revenge --Letters of betrayed love --Phantom palace --And of clay are we created

The Complete Prose of Woody Allen


Woody Allen - 1989
    Brings together three hilarious pieces by America's comic genius: Without Feathers, a secret journal that addresses life's "big" questions; Getting Even, Woody as psychologist, historian, and philosopher; and Side Effects, Woody's take on UFOs and more.

Soft and Others: 16 Stories of Wonder and Dread


F. Paul Wilson - 1989
    Presents a collection of horror short stories, among them Soft, Green Winter, and The Cleaning Machine.Contents:The Cleaning MachineRatmanLipidleggin'To Fill the Sea and AirGreen WinterBe Fruitful and MultiplySoftThe Last One Mo' Once Golden Oldies RevivalThe Years the Music DiedDat-Tay-VaoDoc JohnsonBucketsTrapsMusclesMenage a TroisCutsBonus storiesPerformanceNight DiveMemoirs of the EffsterRumorsHunters

The Ice at the Bottom of the World: Stories


Mark Richard - 1989
    In these ten stories, Mark Richard, winner of the 1990 PEN/Ernest Hemingway Foundation Award, emerges as the heir apparent to Mark Twain, Flannery O'Connor, and William Faulkner.

And of Clay Are We Created


Isabel Allende - 1989
    In 1985, a volcano erupted in Colombia. The heat of the volcano melted sheets of ice, resulting in mudslides. More than 23,000 people were killed. The media focused much attention on a thirteen-year-old girl trapped in the mud. In this story, the girl is called Azucena, and her rescuer is named Rolf Carlé.

Spider Woman's Granddaughters: Traditional Tales and Contemporary Writing by Native American Women


Paula Gunn Allen - 1989
    Allen set out to understand why this was so and, more importantly, to remedy the situation. The result is this powerful collection of traditional tales, biographical writings, and contemporary short stories, many by the most accomplished Native American women writing today, including: Louise Erdrich, Mary TallMountain, Linda Hogan, and many others.

Women as Demons


Tanith Lee - 1989
    In this collection of fantasy, science fiction and horror stories, the witch, the vampiress, the femme fatale and the vengeful goddess spring to life.

Black-Eyed Susans and Midnight Birds: Stories by and about Black Women


Mary Helen Washington - 1989
    This book combines in one volume two now classic short story collections.  The editor has added a new introduction and prefatory material."Mary Helen Washington has had a greater impact upon the formation of the canon of Afro-American literature than has any other scholar." --The New York Times Book Review

Great Short Works of Willa Cather


Willa Cather - 1989
    A luminous collection--with an introduction, notes, chronology, and bibliography--of ten of Willa Cather's short works written from 1900 to 1920.

Blue World


Robert R. McCammon - 1989
    From the battlefields of a Vietnam veteran's memory to an old-time movie hero's search for a serial killer, from Halloween in a special town--where the rules of trick-or-treat are written in blood--to a Texas road where a wrong turn leads to a nest of evil, horror master McCammon is at his terrifying best in this collection of stories.

Alexandra Stoddard's Living Beautiful


Alexandra Stoddard - 1989
    In this idea-filled book, she presents readers with dozens of suggestions and advice for living fully today.

The Rainbow Stories


William T. Vollmann - 1989
    Burroughs comes thirteen unnerving and often breathtaking stories populated by punks and angels, skinheads and religious assassins, streetwalkers and fetishists--people who live outside the law and and the clear light of the every day. Set in landscapes as diverse as ancient Babylon, India, and the seamy underbelly of San Francisco, these daring and innovative tales are laced with Vollman's fertile imagination. The Rainbow Stories ushers us into a world that bears an awful yet hypnotic resemblance to that of our deepest nightmares, confirming Vollmann's reputation as a dark visionary of contemporary fiction.

More News from Lake Wobegon


Garrison Keillor - 1989
    All are from original live broadcasts of A Prairie Home Companion.Contents: Rotten Apples; O Death; The Wise Men; A Trip to Grand Rapids; Truckstop; Smokes; The Perils of Spring; Let Us Pray; Alaska; Uncle Al's Gift; Skinny Dip; Homecoming; Pontoon Boat; Author; Freedom of the Press; Vicks

For I Have Touched The Sky (Tales Of Kirinyaga)


Mike Resnick - 1989
    In the utopian world of Kirinyaga, a young girl is happy to abide by the Kikuyu traditions until she finds a book and wants to learn how to read -- Kikuyu customs do not allow girls to read.

The Year's Best Fantasy: Second Annual Collection


Ellen DatlowRu Emerson - 1989
    Recommended reading lists and selected poetry complete the volume.Contents: * Summation 1988: Fantasy by Terri Windling * Summation 1988: Horror by Ellen Datlow * Horror and Fantasy on the Screen by Edward Bryant * Obituaries * Death is Different by Lisa Goldstein * The Tale of the Rose and the Nightingale (And What Came of It) by Gene Wolfe * It Was the Heat by Pat Cadigan * The Cutter by Edward Bryant * The Freezer Jesus by John DuFresne * Voices of the Kill by Thomas M. Disch * Secretly by Ruth Roston * The Devil's Rose by Tanith Lee * Wempires by Daniel Pinkwater * Scatter My Ashes by Greg Egan * Unfinished Portrait of the King of Pain by Van Gogh by Ian McDonald * Shoo Fly by Richard Matheson * The Thing Itself by Michael Blumlein * The Soft Whisper of Midnight Snow by Charles de Lint * Roman Games by Ann Gay * The Princess, the Cat, and the Unicorn by Patricia C. Wrede * The Book and Its Contents by Robert Kelly * The Great God Pan by M. John Harrison * Lost Bodies by Ian Watson * Two Minutes Forty-Five Seconds by Dan Simmons * Preflash by John M. Ford * Life of Buddha by Lucius Shepard * Appointment With Eddie by Charles Beaumont * Fragments of Papyrus from the Temple of the Older Gods by William Kotzwinkle * Spillage by Nancy Kress * Snowman by Charles L. Grant * The Scar by Dennis Etchison * Laiken Langstrand by Gwyneth Jones * The Last Poem About the Snow Queen and Pinocchio by Sandra M. Gilbert * Game in the Pope's Head by Gene Wolfe * Playing the Game by Ramsey Campbell * Faces by F. Paul Wilson * Snowfall by Jessie Thompson * Seal-Self by Sara Maitland * No Hearts, No Flowers by Barry N. Malzberg * The Boy Who Drew Unicorns by Jane Yolen * The Darling by Scott Bradfield * Night They Missed the Horror Show by Joe R. Lansdale * Your Story by Rick DeMarinis * Winter Solstice - Camelot Station by John M. Ford * The Boy Who Hooked the Sun by Gene Wolfe * Clem's Dream by Joan Aiken * Love In Vain by Lewis Shiner * In the Darkened Hours by Bruce Boston * A Golden Net for Silver Fishes by Ru Emerson * Dancing Among Ghosts by Jim Aikin * Honorable Mentions: 1988

Soulstorm


Clarice Lispector - 1989
    Both are remarkable, both are unmistakably Lispector.

The Further Adventures of Batman


Martin H. GreenbergStuart M. Kaminsky - 1989
    . . a . . . a bat!”—Bruce WayneIt began with those words fifty years ago, a crusade that would grow into a legend. Orphaned as a child, his parents murdered before his eyes, millionaire Bruce Wayne dedicated his life to avenging their deaths, becoming in the dark of night the costume-garbed protector of Gotham City, BATMAN.To celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of his creation, fifteen of today’s greatest writers of fantastic fiction have joined together to take you inside his world of shadows and fear in all-new tales of mystery, humor, horror, and the supernatural. These are your guides through The Further Adventures Of Batman.

The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Third Annual Collection


Ellen DatlowMichael Moorcock - 1989
    Collecting the creme de la creme of the horror and fantasy fields, this third volume amasses the best from 1989, including works by Scott Baker, Pat Cadigan, Joe Haldeman, Tanith Lee, Jonah Carroll, Robert McCammon and Bruce Sterling, as well as extensive overviews of the year in horror and fantasy, and Ed Bryant's survey of the year's movies.

Dialogues in Paradise


Can Xue - 1989
    The work of Can Xue (a pseudonym of Changsa writer Deng Xiao-hua) renews our consciousness of the long tradition of the irrational in our literature, where dreams and reality constitute one territory, its borders open, the passage back and forth barely discernible. She fuses lyrical purity with the darkest visions of the grotesque and the result is a unique literary experience.

Morningside World Of Stuart Mclean


Stuart McLean - 1989
    Funny and charming, poignant and nostalgic, McLean's essays illuminate a world most of us take for granted. Among Stuart's favourites in this collection are:- the shocking truth about household dust- the importance of hardware stores- the sad, true tale of Anne, the street lady- an ode to the Popsicle, "one of the world's most perfect foods"- the story of the greatest game of Monopoly ever played.

The Yellow Wallpaper and Other Writings


Charlotte Perkins Gilman - 1989
    Probably best known as the author of "The Yellow Wallpaper," in which a woman is driven mad by chauvinist psychiatry, Gilman wrote numerous other short stories and novels reflecting her radical socialist and feminist view of turn-of-the-century America. Collected here by the noted Gilman scholar Ann J. Lane are eighteen stories and fragments, including a selection from Herland, Gilman's novel of a feminist utopia. The resulting anthology provides a provocative blueprint to Gilman's intellectual and creative production.Content:The yellow wallpaperIf I were a manTurnedThe cottagetteAn honest womanMaking a changeMr. Peebles' heartThe widow's mightSelections from HerlandSelections from Women and economics : a study of the economic relation between men and womenSelections from The man-made world : our androcentric culture.

The Best American Short Stories 1989


Margaret Atwood - 1989
    Sharif.Selected from U.S. and Canadian magazines by Margaret Atwood with Shannon Ravenel; with an introduction by Margaret Atwood.

The New Hugo Winners 1983-1985


Isaac AsimovDavid Brin - 1989
    butler --Press enter / John Varley --Blood child / Octavia e. Butler --The crystal spheres / David Brin

A Gravestone Made of Wheat


Will Weaver - 1989
    A dozen stories deal with a heartbroken widower, hunters, farmers and truck drivers living in Minnesota.

The Plummeting Old Women


Daniil Kharms - 1989
    These texts are characterized by a startling and macabre novelty, with elements of the grotesque, fantastic and child-like touching the imagination of the everyday. They express the cultural landscape of Stalinism -- years of show trials, mass atrocities and stifled political life. Their painful, unsettling eloquence testify to the humane and the comic in this absurdist writer's work. The translator Neil Cornwall gives a biographical introduction to his subject, enlarged upon by the poet Hugh Maxton in a contextual assessment of the writing of Flann O'Brien, Le Fanu and Doyle, and of their shared concerns with detective fiction, terror and death. Daniil Kharms 91905-42) died under Stalin. Along with fellow poets and prose-writers of the era -- Khlebnikov, Biely, Mandelstam, Zabolotsky and Pasternak -- he is one of the emerging experimentalists of Russian modernism.

Fair Play


Tove Jansson - 1989
    They have argued, worked, and laughed together for decades. Yet they’ve never really stopped taking each other by surprise. Fair Play shows us Mari and Jona’s intertwined lives as they watch Fassbinder films and Westerns, critique each other’s work, spend time on a solitary island (recognizable to readers of Jansson’s The Summer Book), travel through the American Southwest, and turn life into nothing less than art.

If the River Was Whiskey


T. Coraghessan Boyle - 1989
    Boyle tears through the walls of contemporary society to reveal a world at once comic and tragic, droll and horrific. Boyle introduces us to a death-defying stuntman who rides across the country strapped to the axle of a Peterbilt, and to a retired primatologist who can’t adjust to the “civilized” world. He chronicles the state of romance that requires full-body protection in a disease-conscious age and depicts with aching tenderness the relationship between a young boy and his alcoholic father. These magical and provocative stories mark yet another virtuoso performance from one of America’s most supple and electric literary inventors.

Endangered Species


Gene Wolfe - 1989
    This is a hefty volume of over 30 unforgettable stories in a variety of genres-- SF, fantasy, horror, mainstream-many of them offering variations on themes and situations found in folklore and fairy tales, and including two stories, "The Cat" and "The Map," which are set in the universe of his New Sun novels. Wolfe's deconstructions/reconstructions are provocative, multilayered, and resonant. This embarrassment of literary riches is a must for all Gene Wolfe fans, and anyone who loves a good tale beautifully told.

The Oxford Book of Irish Short Stories


William TrevorLiam O'Flaherty - 1989
    The Oxford Book of Irish Short Stories triumphantly demonstrates the development of the short story in Ireland--from the early folk tales of the oral tradition (here translated from the Irish) to the writing of Oliver Goldsmith, Oscar Wilde, and James Joyce. William Trevor, himself a distinguished short story writer, brings a special sensibility and awareness to his role as editor as he presents stories by Maria Edgeworth, Elizabeth Bowen, Liam O'Flaherty and such modern rising stars as Edna O'Brian, Desmond Hogan, and Joyce Cary. This wide-ranging collection of forty-five stories will certainly serve to entertain and enrich our understanding of this unique literary genre.

Rumpole at the Bar


John Mortimer - 1989
    

The Panic Hand: Stories


Jonathan Carroll - 1989
    The Panic Hand assembles in one volume the shorter works of this master, including the World Fantasy Award-winning tale Friend's Best Man and the short novels Uh-Oh and Black Cocktail.

Strange Things in Close-up: The Nearly Complete Howard Waldrop


Howard Waldrop - 1989
    Hudson's Secret Gorilla (1977)". . .The World as We Know't." (1982)Green Brother (1982)Mary Margaret Road-Grader (1976)Save a Place in the Lifeboat for Me (1976)Horror, We Got (1979)Man-Mountain Gentian (1983)God's Hooks! (1982)Heirs of the Perisphere (1985)All about Strange Monsters of the Recent Past (1980)Helpless, Helpless (1984)Fair Game (1986)What Makes Heironymous Run? (1985)The Lions Are Asleep This Night (1986)Flying Saucer Rock and Roll (1985)He-We-Await (1987)

Antique Dust: Ghost Stories


Robert Westall - 1989
    While this is his first book for adults, he has been writing ghost stories for young adult readers such as "The Machine Gunners".

Collected Stories


Richard Matheson - 1989
    Collected stories by Richard Matheson with appreciations by other s/f authors such as Ray Bradbury.

A Book Of Pixie Stories


Enid Blyton - 1989
    Some pixies are sweet and helpful, but some are lazy, and the naughty ones love to play tricks. In this book you will meet all sorts of pixies, so you will know what to do if you ever see one.

The Year's Best Science Fiction: Sixth Annual Collection


Gardner DozoisKristine Kathryn Rusch - 1989
    Shummel Exits a Winner • (1988) • shortstory by John Kessel449 • Emissary • (1988) • novelette by Stephen Kraus468 • It Was the Heat • (1988) • shortstory by Pat Cadigan482 • Skin Deep • (1988) • shortstory by Kristine Kathryn Rusch496 • Dying in Hull • (1988) • shortstory by David Alexander Smith [as by D. Alexander Smith ]509 • Distances • (1988) • novelette by Kathe Koja526 • Famous Monsters • (1988) • shortstory by Kim Newman535 • The Scalehunter's Beautiful Daughter • [Griaule] • (1988) • novella by Lucius Shepard591 • Honorable Mentions: 1988 • essay by Gardner Dozois

Dreams of Distant Lives


Lee K. Abbott - 1989
    “This is a writer whose language explores the range of life.”—Bette Peretsky“Large in scope and meaning and unforgettable.”—William Harrison

The Dead and Other Stories from Dubliners


James Joyce - 1989
    A brilliant example of the most accessible writing by the towering genius who set the standard for the Modern period of English literature, "The Dead" features the rich interior monologues for which Joyce is known-an especially rewarding experience in the audio medium. 2 cassettes.

The Shōwa Anthology: Modern Japanese Short Stories


Van C. GesselTsutomu Minakami - 1989
    These twenty-five stories, most of them newly translated, were composed during the six decades of the Showa period (from 1926 to 1989) by some of the finest Japanese writers of this century. The variety and scope of these works attest both to the tenacity of Japanese literary tradition and to the ability of the Japanese writer to absorb and adapt contemporary literary techniques. Most of all, they are vivid artistic responses to what may well be the most turbulent, challenging era in modern Japanese history. The anthology includes stories by authors whose reputations are already well established in the West--Nobel laureate Kawabata Yasunari, Endo Shusaku, Oe Kenzaburo, Dazai Osamu, Inoue Yasushi, and Abe Kobo. In addition, many authors considered of the first rank in Japan are represented, often for the first time in English--Kajii Motojiro, Shono Junzo, Ishikawa Jun, and Shimao Toshio. Six stories by women writers provide a sampling of fiction by a group of authors who have become a major creative force in postwar literature. These authors, much like the classical Japanese painter, are seldom at home producing vast, panoramic landscapes of life; rather they are masters at creating rich genre-style vignettes and brief flashes of inspiration. When these small, reverberating scenes are placed one beside another, the scroll that unfolds before the reader's eyes is a subtle and complex portrait of human experience. In formal literary terms, the works range from the discursive autobiographical sketch to imaginative surrealism; from the gentle lyrical mode to the ultramodern intellectual discourse; from pastoral wistfulness to studies of war and its destructive force. Rendered into English by the leading translators and scholars from the younger generation of Japanologists, these stories will appeal to every literary taste. They clearly demonstrate that literature in Japan over the past half century has been a living, changing entity, responding to and commenting upon the vicissitudes of the society. The Japanese short story, as The Showa Anthology demonstrates, has survived wars and defeats and the advent of high-technology in the present age to evolve into a durable and universal form of literary expression.Contents:Introduction by Van C. GesselKuchisuke's Valley by Ibuse MasujiMating by Kajii MotojirōLes joues en feu by Hori TatsuoMagic Lantern by Dazai OsamuMoon jems by Ishikawa JunThe magic chalk by Abe KōbōBad Company by Yasuoka ShōtarōEggs by Mishima YukioStars by Kojima NobuoAre the trees green? by Yoshiyuki JunnosukeStill life by Shōno JunzōWith maya by Shimao ToshioThe monastery by Kurahashi YumikoUnder the shadow of Mt. Bandai by Inoue YasushiMulberry child by Minakami TsutomuOne arm by Kawabata YasunariThe day before by Endō ShūsakuFriends by Abe AkiraRipples by Shibaki YoshikoThe pale fox by Ōbe MinakoIron fish by Kōno TaekoPlatonic Love by Kanai MiekoThe crushed pellet by Kaikō TakeshiThe clever rain tree by Ōe KenzaburōThe silent traders by Tsushima YūkoThe immortal by Nakagami Kenji

Crystal Express


Bruce Sterling - 1989
    But they also show concern for the future of real people.CONTENTS:Swarm (1982)Spider Rose (1982)Cicada Queen (1983)Sunken Gardens (1984)Twenty Evocations (1984)Green Days in Brunei (1985)Spook (1983)The Beautiful and the Sublime (1986)Telliamed (1984)The Little Magic Shop (1987)Flowers of Edo (1987)Dinner in Audoghast (1985)

Everything Is Nice: Collected Stories, Fragments and Plays


Jane Bowles - 1989
    But it was enough to establish a reputation as one of the 20th century's most original fiction writers.

The Little Angel


Leonid Andreyev - 1989
    Between the two Revolutions of 1905 and 1917 Leonid Andreyev was without a doubt the foremost writer in Russia. His name was always spoken with veneration, in mysterious whispers, as a grim portentous magician who descended into the ultimate depths of the nether side of life and fathomed the beauty and tragedy of the struggle. Leonid Nickolayevitch was born in the province of Oryol, in 1871, and studied law at the University of Moscow. Those were days of suffering and starvation; he gazed into the abyss of sorrow and despair. In January 1894 he made an unsuccessful attempt to kill himself by shooting, and then was forced by the authorities to severe penitence, which augmented the natural morbidness of his temperament. As a lawyer his career was short-lived, and he soon abandoned it for literature, beginning as a police-court reporter on the Moscow Courier. In 1902 he published the short story In the Fog, which for the first time brought him universal recognition. He was imprisoned during the revolution of 1905, together with Maxim Gorky, on political charges. Such are the few significant details of his personal life, for the true Andreyev is entirely in his stories and plays.

The Susan Howatch Collection


Susan Howatch - 1989
    The first is "The Shrouded Walls", which is a mystery set in Kent, the second is "April's Grave" which features murder in the Scottish Highlands, and the third is a tale of Welsh black magic, "The Devil on Lammas Night".

The Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald: A New Collection


F. Scott Fitzgerald - 1989
    

Forests of the Night


Tanith Lee - 1989
    Each story is prefaced with a short introduction by the author.

Wind


Leigh Allison Wilson - 1989
    A collection of stunning impact, suffused with humanity, sadness, humor, and the cold romance of isolation.

The Hungry Girls and Other Stories


Patricia Eakins - 1989
    These stories are a modern bestiary which rework the stuff of mythologies, spanning the cultures of the planet, reclaiming for the Imagination its territories from Science. They are counterfables in which the usual fabulous project is reversed: animal characteristics are attributed to humans, and humans and animals are seen as codeterminants of the moral and cultural landscape.

Kuiskaus pimeässä


H.P. Lovecraft - 1989
    Sisällys:Varjo Innsmouthin yllä (The Shadow Over Innsmouth, 1931)Cthulhun kutsu (The Call of Cthulhu, 1926)Dunwichin hirviö (The Dunwich Horror, 1928)Kuiskaus pimeässä (The Whisperer in Darkness, 1930)

Novelty: Four Stories


John Crowley - 1989
    here is "The Nightingale Sings at Night," a sweet-hearted, gentle, yet poignant tale that retells the story of creation from an entirely new vantage point; a novella called "Novelty," an intriguing and amusing foray into a writer's mind; "In Blue," a science fictional tale about a Brave New World where everything is known—a world no less dark than the medieval age of ignorance; and "Great Work of Time," a short novel of time travel hope, and possibility set in nostalgic British colonial empire. Fascinating. melancholy and brilliantly inventive. it stands with the finest work Crowley has ever put to the page.

A Wolf in Frog's Clothing: The best of Alphonse Allais


Alphonse Allais - 1989
    His totally white canvas, 'Anaemic Young Girls Going to their First Communion through a Blizzard', was only one of a series of such trail-blazing works. He was also one of the finest humorous writers France has ever produced -Jean Cocteau called him the 'prince of storytellers'.This collection of his best and funniest stories is translated and introduced by Miles Kington, columnist for Punch and The Times, whose own books include Moreover and Let's Parler Franglais..

The Manger is Empty: Stories in Time


Walter Wangerin Jr. - 1989
    Weaving together autobiography, evocative short fiction, and poetry, Wangerin explores spiritual longings and the joy of discovering God's presence in everyday life.

Seeing Red


David J. Schow - 1989
    Schow received the World Fantasy Award for "Red Light" and the Twilight Zone Magazine Dimension award for "Coming Soon to a Theatre Near You", both of which are included in this volume.

The Asimov Chronicles: Fifty Years of Isaac Asimov, Volume Five


Isaac Asimov - 1989
    That thou art mindful of himEarthset and evening starThe bicentennial manTrue love

The Expendables: Stories


Antonya Nelson - 1989
     Most of the stories in The Expendables are about marriage -- marriage in process, about to be, about not to be anymore, possibly transgressed, and decidedly not transgressed. In the title story, a teenage boy participates in the spectacle of his sister's second marriage. In "Dog Problems," a husband muses about his wife's attachment to her dog, a bond that predates their marriage and will -- he fears -- outlast it. There is the woman in "Affair Life," happily encircled by her husband and child, who still must choose between her marriage and what is not quite yet an infidelity. Ranging in setting from Atlanta to Chicago and Kansas City, from the arid Southwest to the course of a river running through Colorado canyon walls, the stories in The Expendables show our relationship with destiny, whether resisted, invented, obeyed, or forced.

New Stories from the South: The Year's Best 1989


Shannon Ravenel - 1989
    The long-time editor of Best American Short Stories has selected 15 short stories from and about the American South of today.

Women, Kids Huckleberry Wine


Anne Cameron - 1989
    The wish for a perfect world is in perpetual conflict with things as they are-and as they shouldn't be.SEVEN SHORT STORIES BY ANNE CAMERON:NAN must choose between an oversized amphibian and a normal life.LOUELLA seeks fame fortune as a night-club pianist.DAVE has his work cut out for him domesticating Louella.EMMA decides one day to leave her job and start her own church.And a GOOLIEGUY (did'ja ever hear of one?) brings new meaning to a lonely woman's life.

Masterpieces of Fantasy and Wonder


David G. HartwellE.T.A. Hoffmann - 1989
    Escape into the fantastic worlds of Charles Dickens, J.M. Barrie, Graham Greene, Harlan Ellison, and others found in these 38 magical tales.

The Masked Fisherman and Other Stories


George Mackay Brown - 1989
    Mackay Brown elaborates and transforms it. Here, as in all these 21 stories, his imagination plays upon the past and gives it rich meaning for the present - and indeed universality.

Coyote in the Mountains: And Other Stories


John Rember - 1989
    Comprised of nine stories that read sequentially, the book reads like a novel, a fable of the New West, with Coyote drifting through the lives of domesticated characters in a resort community in the Northern Rockies. The book is beautifully accented with illustrations by artist Julie Scott.

Arrival of the Snake-Woman and Other Stories


Olive Senior - 1989
    Set again in Jamaica, these new stories continue to explore the child as an isolated individual coming to terms with the strange, harsh ways of the adult world.

H. P. Lovecraft and the Cthulhu Mythos


Robert M. Price - 1989
    

The Bureau of Lost Souls


Christopher Fowler - 1989
    Christopher Fowler writes with black humour about desperate people in seemingly ordinary situations - workers in offices and friends in pubs, husbands and wives in apartments and houses. All of them the most unlikely, and therefore the most likely, people to find themselves trapped within their own personal, private visions of Hell.

Lovers And Comrades: Women's Resistance Poetry From Central America


Amanda Hopkinson - 1989
    

Razored Saddles


Joe R. LansdaleChet Williamson - 1989
    Here are 17 startlingly original masterpieces of the macabre—gruesome tales of madness, vengeance and heart-stopping horror in a world of Indians and aliens, of gunmen, ghouls and Elvis impersonators. Experience a modern-day dinosaur round-up, learn the shocking truth about the hideous curse that killed Doc Holliday... and ride a 40-foot rattlesnake in a bizarre post-nuclear rodeo. All this and more awaits you in a remarkable anthology of evil that gives the western a black hat and a bad name.Contents:Introduction: The Cowpunk Anthology, by Joe R. Lansdale and Pat LoBrutto.Black Boots, by Robert R. McCammon.Thirteen Days of Glory, by Scott Cupp.Gold, by Lewis Shiner.The Tenth Toe, by F. Paul Wilson,Sedalia, by David J. Schow.Trapline, by Ardath Mayhar.Trail of the Chromium Bandits, by Al Sarrantonio.Dinker's Pond, by Richard Laymon.Stampede, by Melissa Mia Hall.Empty Places, by Gary L. Raisor.Tony Red Dog, by Neal Barrett, Jr.The Passing of the Western, by Howard Waldrop.Eldon's Penitente, by Lenore Carroll.The Job, by Joe R. Lansdale.I'm Always Here, by Richard Christian Matheson."Yore Skin's Jes's Soft 'N Purty..." He Said, by Chet Williamson.Razored Saddles, by Robert Petitt.

Analog Science Fiction and Fact, May 1989


Stanley Schmidt - 1989
    

A Walk On The Wild Side: Cat Stories (Contents)


Robert Westall - 1989
    Spartan was Granda's cat to the very last. Solomon/Satan was a cat of the sixties, a cat that brings about the battle of the sexes in a student's hostel. Goliath was a hero, who makes a boy choose another way from his father's. Buttons was a charmer, who saves traditional village cricket from the age of hi-tech. But the stories of Boss and Rama are the stangest of all, the wildest and most chilling.

The Short Stories (Virago Modern Classics)


Willa Cather - 1989
    Her stories and novels embrace life there in the early 1900's as no other author's works have done. Unabridged.

Finale


Michael Nava - 1989
    Suspense. Murder. In these masterfully executed stories brought together by editor Michael Nava, well-known names and newer writers present tales that will intrigue, chill, and startle with their plot twists and complex characters. Readers introduced to these talented writers will rapidly turn the spine-tingling pages. Mystery. Suspense. Murder. In these masterfully executed stories brought together by editor Michael Nava, well-known names and newer writers present tales that will intrigue, chill, and startle with their plot twists and complex characters. Readers introduced to these talented writers will rapidly turn the spine-tingling pages.

You Never Believe Me: And Other Stories


Davis Grubb - 1989
    

Book of Masks


Hwang Sun-won - 1989
    The Book of Masks is widely regarded as the greatest work of his long and distinguished career. These are revealing, gripping and disturbing stories of South Korean life today.

Family Sins and Other Stories


William Trevor - 1989
    

The Daughter of the Commandant, and the Queen of Spades


Alexander Pushkin - 1989
    Pushkin pioneered the use of vernacular speech in his poems and plays, creating a style of storytelling-mixing drama, romance, and satire-associated with Russian literature ever since and greatly influencing later Russian writers. Pushkin published his first poem at the age of fifteen, and was widely recognized by the literary establishment by the time of his graduation from the Imperial Lyceum in Tsarskoe Selo. He gradually became committed to social reform and emerged as a spokesman for literary radicals; in the early 1820s he clashed with the government, which sent him into exile in southern Russia. While under the strict surveillance of government censors and unable to travel or publish at will, he wrote his most famous play, the drama Boris Godunov: A Drama in Verse. Critics consider many of his works masterpieces, such as the poem The Bronze Horseman and the drama The Stone Guest. He also wrote The Daughter of the Commandant and Marie: A Story of Russian Love, and The Queen of Spades.

Walking Wounded


William McIlvanney - 1989
    The walking wounded. These are the stories of ordinary people.

Stories: Contemporary Southern Short Fiction


Donald Hays - 1989
    Included are works from such diverse Southern writers as Andre Dubus, William Goyen, Mary Hood, Tom T. Hall, Lewis Nordan and Jayne Anne Phillips.“This book has spunk and fire and a broad streak of recurring orneriness to go with its lyricism and nimble drama. In spite of all the variety it contains, the book has a unified tone— a Southern tone no doubt in spite of seeming to originate in all corners of the compass. The range of subject matter is as engaging as the multitudinous techniques. It is not only the various authors who deserve congratulation but the editor as well— for he has measured and selected with a creative imagination quite equal to the accomplishments of the individual writers represented here. He has heard the protracted rumble of an earthquake and loyally mapped the territory where the major tremors occurred.“It is not a book from which one can easily select favorites, and that is as it should be. These stories aren’t in competition. Too many of them are absolutely first rate to imagine ranking them. Having said that, I can’t help saying that I was tickled into a persistent giggling by Lewis Nordan’s “Sugar Among The Chickens.” Ah, then, it’s one good story among a host of others.” — R.V. Cassill

Indiscreet Journeys: Stories of Women on the Road


Lisa St. Aubin de Terán - 1989
    Includes writings by Welty, Cather, Wharton, and others.

Florida Stories


Kevin M. McCarthy - 1989
    The stories range widely across Florida history and landscapes—St. Petersburg in the 20s, Key West and Alachua County in the 30s, Coconut Grove and Jacksonville in the 50s, Miami Beach in the 60s, and Ft. Lauderdale in the 70s. Andrew Lytle recounts violent events in an Indian village during the Spanish rule. Sarah Orne Jewett and Stephen Crane treat maritime Florida in the 19th century while Hemingway and Philip Wylie present stories of the 20th century. From the pinewoods of northern Florida, through cracker farms, boom towns, and coastal suburbs, to the swamps and the Keys, we meet characters both common and extraordinary: moonshiners, socialites, carnies, sailors, scavengers, and fugitives. McCarthy’s collection reveals the impact of a rich human and natural environment on the work of these distinguished writers. In the process it captures the uniquely Floridian coincidence of the exotic and mundane.

On the Far Side of the Cadillac Desert with Dead Folks


Joe R. Lansdale - 1989
    Bounty hunter Wayne is hunting his quarry Calhoun in a "Dead Dancing" bar where patrons pay to dance with female zombies and sometimes other things... After a violent struggle, Wayne manages to handcuff Calhoun who's wanted for raping and murdering a young girl. In order to collect his bounty, Wayne has to cross the Cadillac Desert to a place called Lawtown where criminals are executed by being pulled apart by tractors.

The Neumiller Stories


Larry Woiwode - 1989
    This volume collects Woiwode's original series, written for the New Yorker in the sixties and seventies and later incorporated into his second novel, Beyond the Bedroom Wall, but also a fresh harvest of more recent stories about the immigrant family determined to preserve the values they had brought with them to America.

The Devil and the Giro: Two Centuries of Scottish Stories


Carl MacDougall - 1989
    It is a tradition that has not diminished over the years and indeed there is today a body of young writers in the forefront of contemporary literature whose narrative voice is as compelling as that of their illustrious predecessors.This collection includes stories from all the major Scottish writers both famous and unsung. Hogg, Stevenson, Conan Doyle, Hugh MacDiarmid, Muriel Spark, James Kelman, and Alasdair Gray are but a few of the 50 contributors. The anthology encompasses many examples of the themes in which Scottish writers have always excelled, most notably in that archetypal twinning of opposites where the ordinary meets the fantastic, man encounters the Devil, or the real and the supernatural converge. This is the stuff of the ancient storytellers and the tradition has persisted to this day where the hard reality of urban existence still involves coming to terms with life and death.

Unknown Worlds: Tales from Beyond


Stanley Schmidt - 1989
    A Gnome There Was by Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore 2. Armageddon by Fredric Brown3. Blind Alley by Malcolm Jameson4. Conscience, Ltd. by Jack Williamson5. Fruit of Knowledge by C. L. Moore6. Greenface by James H. Schmitz7. Hell Hath Fury by Cleve Cartmill8. Hell Is Forever by Alfred Bester9. Hereafter, Inc. by Lester del Rey10. It by Theodore Sturgeon11. Mr. Jinx by Fredric Brown and Robert Arthur 12. Snulbug by Anthony Boucher13. The Bleak Shore [Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser] by Fritz Leiber14. The Cloak by Robert Bloch15. The Gnarly Man by L. Sprague de Camp16. The Hag Séleen by Theodore Sturgeon and James H. Beard (variant of The Hag Sèleen) 17. The Misguided Halo by Henry Kuttner18. The Pipes of Pan by Lester del Rey19. The Refugees by Frank Belknap Long20. The Wheels of If [Park Alister] by L. Sprague de Camp21. The Witch by A. E. van Vogt22. They by Robert A. Heinlein23. Trouble with Water by H. L. Gold24. Two Sought Adventure [Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser] by Fritz Leiber25. When It Was Moonlight by Manly Wade Wellman

Love and Will: Twenty Stories


Stephen Dixon - 1989
    Some of the stories included veer closely into prose poem territory.

Sudden Twists: 18 Tales That Take a Surprising Turn


Burton Goodman - 1989
    Adapted well-known short stories by traditional authors and newer multicultural authors entice even struggling readers with tales of adventure, derring-do, and surprise. Vocabulary in context and critical thinking exercises help readers improve their understanding of the narrative text.

Tahuri


Ngahuia Te Awekotuku - 1989
    "There is always a special feeling I get when I read a book written by a Maori about being Maori, where the world is described through eyes that are my eyes - the people, the humour, the sadness and the occasions are familiar parts of my life - and Tahuri is such a book." -Books for Secondary School Libraries

Six of the Best: Short Novels by Masters of Mystery


Ellery Queen - 1989
    Ellery Queen edits and contributes a story in which Ellery solves a mystery but is unwilling to reveal the answer publicly. Ed McBain has an 87th Precinct story. Simenon has a Maigret story; Gardner a Sheriff Bill Holden. A sampler of what makes these mystery writers famous. If you like one of these mystery writers, read their story, and then see what your fellow readers have been liking about these six masters of mystery.

Spotted Horses And Other Stories


William Faulkner - 1989
    A collection of short stories features the business of horsetrading, a boy's first hunting experience, and a group effort to re-roof a church.

Mother, Don't Lock Me In That Closet!


Harley King - 1989
    A collection of haiku, poetry, essays and short stories.