Book picks similar to
Bon voyage Mr. President and other stories by Gabriel García Márquez
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50 Great American Short Stories
Milton CraneRing Lardner - 1963
Found in a Bottle', Bret Harte’s 'The Outcasts of Poker Flat', Sherwood Anderson’s 'Death in the Woods', Stephen Vincent Benét’s 'By the Waters of Babylon'. Also some little-known masterpieces as Edith Wharton’s 'The Dilettante', Finley Peter Dunne’s 'Mr. Dooley on the Popularity of Fireman', Charles M. Flandrau’s 'A Dead Issue', and James Reid Parker’s 'The Archimandrite's Niece'.There are also splendid offerings from Melville, Henry James, Dreiser, Faulkner, Hemingway, Steinbeck, McCullers, Irwin Shaw, John Cheever and Erskine Caldwell.
An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
Ambrose Bierce - 1995
Six evocative stories of mystery and coincidence
The Blind Owl
Sadegh Hedayat - 1936
Replete with potent symbolism and terrifying surrealistic imagery, Sadegh Hedayat's masterpice details a young man's despair after losing a mysterious lover. And as the author gradually drifts into frenzy and madness, the reader becomes caught in the sandstorm of Hedayat's bleak vision of the human condition. The Blind Owl, which has been translated into many foreign languages, has often been compared to the writing of Edgar Allan Poe.
The Door in the Wall and Other Stories
H.G. Wells - 1911
It is a tale all of us know, the attempt to recover a period when our lives were simpler and complications lay far in the future.Other titles are: "The Star," "A Dream of Armageddon," "The Cone," "A Moonlight Fable," "The Diamond Maker," "The Lord of the Dynamos," and Wells' durably celebrated story of true freedom and the human spirit "The Country of the Blind."
The Troublesome Offspring of Cardinal Guzmán
Louis de Bernières - 1992
But this unruly utopia is imperiled when the demon-harried Cardinal Guzmán decides to inaugurate a new Inquisition, with Cochadebajo as its ultimate target. On his side, the Cardinal has an army of fanatics who are all too willing to destroy bodies in order to save souls. The Cochadebajeros have precious little ammunition, unless you count chef Dolores's incendiary Chicken of a True Man, and a civil defense that deems nothing more crucial than the act of love. Part epic, part farce, The Troublesome Offspring of Cardinal Guzmán confirms de Bernières's reputation as England's answer to Gabriel García Márquez.
Young Zaphod Plays It Safe
Douglas Adams - 1986
It doesn't appear as a standalone work, but is included with several collections. The story is a prequel to the events in The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy and has the young Zaphod Beeblebrox working as a salvage ship operator. He guides some bureaucrats to a crashed spaceship which may be leaking some hazardous materials. The bureaucrats are determined to "make it safe". The comic asides in the story include some of the time travel paradoxes which are a common running theme in Adams' SF work, and plenty of material about lobsters
The Virgin and the Gipsy & Other Stories
D.H. Lawrence - 1930
In struggling to escape from their thwarted lives and to achieve human 'tenderness', the characters embody and continue the major preoccupations of Lawrence's work as a whole.Love Among the Haystacks provides an early illustration of the intensity and innovation which made Lawrence one of the most distinctive and important of twentieth-century writers.
Stephen King - Short Stories (Book Guide): 1408 - 1922 - a Good Marriage - a Very Tight Place - All That You Love Will Be Carried Away - Apt Pupil - Autopsy
Stephen King - 2011
Commentary (stories not included). Pages: 37. Chapters: 1408, 1922, A Good Marriage, A Very Tight Place, All That You Love Will Be Carried Away, Apt Pupil, Autopsy Room Four, Ayana, Battleground, Beachworld, Big Driver, Blind Willie, Blockade Billy, Cain Rose Up, Chattery Teeth, Children of the Corn, Crouch End, Dedication, Dolan's Cadillac, Everything's Eventual, Graduation Afternoon, Graveyard Shift, Gray Matter, Harvey's Dream, Heavenly Shades of Night are Falling, Here There Be Tygers, Home Delivery, I've Got to Get Away, I Am the Doorway, I Know What You Need, In the Deathroom, It Grows On You, Jerusalem's Lot, L.T.'s Theory of Pets, Luckey Quarter, Lunch at the Gotham Cafe, Memory, Morality, Mrs. Todd's Shortcut, Mute, My Pretty Pony, N., Never Look Behind You, Night Surf, Nona, One for the Road, Popsy, Premium Harmony, Quitters, Inc., Rainy Season, Rest Stop, Riding the Bullet, Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption, Secret Window, Secret Garden, Slade, Sneakers, Sometimes They Come Back, Stationary Bike, Suffer the Little Children, Survivor Type, That Feeling, You Can Only Say What It Is in French, The Ballad of the Flexible Bullet, The Beggar and the Diamond, The Blue Air Compressor, The Body, The Boogeyman, The Breathing Method, The Cat From Hell, The Cursed Expedition, The Death of Jack Hamilton, The Doctor's Case, The End of the Whole Mess, The Fifth Quarter, The Gingerbread Girl, The Guns of Deschain, The House on Maple Street, The Jaunt, The Langoliers, The Last Rung on the Ladder, The Lawnmower Man, The Ledge, The Library Policeman, The Little Sisters of Eluria, The Man Who Loved Flowers, The Man Who Would Not Shake Hands, The Man in the Black Suit, The Mangler, The Mist, The Monkey, The Moving Finger, The New York Times at Special Bargain Rates, The Night Flier, The Other Side of the Fog, The Raft, The Reach, The Reaper's Image, The Reploids, The Road Virus Heads North, The Sun Dog, The Ten O'Clock People, The Thing at the Bottom o...
The Musical Brain: And Other Stories
César Aira - 2005
Aira, with his fuga hacia adelante or "flight forward" into the unknown, gives us imponderables to ponder and bizarre and seemingly out-of-context plot lines, as well as thoughtful and passionate takes on everyday reality. The title story, first published in the New Yorker, is the creme de la creme of this exhilarating collection.
Telling Tales
Nadine Gordimer - 2004
Their stories capture the range of emotions and situations of our human universe: tragedy, comedy, fantasy, satire, dramas of sexual love and of war in different continents and cultures. They are not about HIV / AIDS. But all twenty-one writers have given their stories--chosen by themselves as representing some of the best of their lifetime work as storytellers--without any fee or royalty.Telling Tales is being published in more than twelve countries. The publisher's profits from the sales of this book will go to HIV / AIDS preventive education and for medical treatment for people living with the suffering this pandemic infection brings to our contemporary world.ContentsAcknowledgementsIntroductionBulldog (Arthur Miller)The Centaur (José Saramago)Down the Quiet Street (Es´kia Mphahlele)The Firebird´s Nest (Salman Rushdie)Cell Phone (Ingo Schulze)Death Constant Beyond Love (Gabriel García Márquez)The Age of Lead (Margaret Atwood)Witnesses of an Era (Günter Grass)The Journey to the Dead (John Updike)Sugar Baby (Chinua Achebe)The Way of the Wind (Amos Oz)Warm Dogs (Paul Theroux)The Ass and the Ox (Michel Tournier)Death of a Son (Njabulo S. Ndebele)The Letter Scene (Susan Sontag)To Have Been (Claudio Magris)A Meeting, At Last (Hanif Kureishi)Associations in Blue (Christa Wolf)The Rejection (Woody Allen)The Ultimate Safari (Nadine Gordimer)Abandoned Children of This Planet (Kensaburo Oe)The ContributorsSource Notes----21 weltberühmte Autorinnen und Autoren erzählen ihre Lieblingsgeschichten; ein Short-Story-Band der Superlative
Pedro Páramo
Juan Rulfo - 1955
Time shifts from one consciousness to another in a hypnotic flow of dreams, desires, and memories, a world of ghosts dominated by the figure of Pedro Páramo - lover, overlord, murderer.Rulfo's extraordinary mix of sensory images, violent passions, and unfathomable mysteries has been a profound influence on a whole generation of Latin American writers, including Carlos Fuentes, Mario Vargas Llosa, and Gabriel García Márquez. To read Pedro Páramo today is as overwhelming an experience as when it was first published in Mexico back in 1955.
The Adventures and Misadventures of Maqroll
Álvaro Mutis - 1993
His extravagant and hopeless undertakings, his brushes with the law and scrapes with death, and his enduring friendships and unlooked-for love affairs make him a Don Quixote for our day, driven from one place to another by a restless and irregular quest for the absolute. Álvaro Mutis's seven dazzling chronicles of the adventures and misadventures of Maqroll have won him numerous honors and a passionately devoted readership throughout the world. Here for the first time in English all these wonderful stories appear in a single volume in Edith Grossman's prize-winning translation.
Stories 1904-1924
Franz Kafka - 2001
From the expressionism of his early prose pieces to his very last work, JOSEPHINE, these stories cover the full range of Kafka's writing career, culminating in THE METAMORPHOSIS, which Elias Canetti described as "one of the few great and perfect works of poetic imagination written during this century." Kafka's stories, argues Borges in his foreword, are superior even to his novels, which is why this collection "gives us the full dimesion of this unique writer.' J.A Underwood's acclaimed translation gives the reader all the chilling atmosphere of Kafka's darkly comic universe, as reflected in the commanding precision of his language.
Things We Lost in the Fire
Mariana Enríquez - 2016
In these stories, reminiscent of Shirley Jackson and Julio Cortázar, three young friends distract themselves with drugs and pain in the midst a government-enforced blackout; a girl with nothing to lose steps into an abandoned house and never comes back out; to protest a viral form of domestic violence, a group of women set themselves on fire. But alongside the black magic and disturbing disappearances, these stories are fueled by compassion for the frightened and the lost, ultimately bringing these characters—mothers and daughters, husbands and wives—into a surprisingly familiar reality. Written in hypnotic prose that gives grace to the grotesque, Things We Lost in the Fire is a powerful exploration of what happens when our darkest desires are left to roam unchecked, and signals the arrival of an astonishing and necessary voice in contemporary fiction.