- Pages: 264
- ISBN: 978-960-572-070-4
- Publication: 2015
- Dimensions: 13,3 x 20,5 εκ.
- Categories: Literature, eBooks, Foreign Literature
"...An experiment that has met with huge acclaim in major literary journals abroad and which often yields exceptional literature or provides even the most conventional literature with tools and approaches that revitalise prose and fiction. For this reason, this book is well worth reading. It is an intelligent person’s view of our everyday lives, told with imagination and humour."
– Panagiotis Krokidas, Tetarto Press"...Saunders’ short stories, deeply human and imbued with a profound humanism beneath their humorous surface, penetrate the reader’s psyche, lingering in the mind long after reading. Some of them are real gems, and the situations he describes may bring to mind the tales of everyday absurdity by Flannery O’Connor, the compelling stories of the great Raymond Carver, but they also have something of Vonnegut’s dark future about them...”
– Librofilo, Librofilo.blogspot.gr"...The author, without bias, records what he sees around him: on the one hand, the gloom of today’s America, but also of the whole world; and on the other, the solitary individual and all the opposing forces waging a relentless battle within him. That is why, under these circumstances, through a play of light and shadow, Saunders’s texts are not disparate but harmonious; they are not the product of the identification of similitudes, but of the union of opposites, hence their harmony."
– Petros Fournaris, Periou.grGeorge Saunders
George Saunders has written eight books, including the short story collections Twelfth of December (Folio Prize 2014) and Pastoralia. He has been a fellow of the Lannan Foundation, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the Guggenheim Foundation. In 2006, he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship. In 2013, he received the PEN/Malamud Short Story Award and was included in Time magazine’s list of the 100 most influential people in the world. His first novel, Oblivion and Lincoln, won the 2017 Man Booker Prize. He teaches on the Creative Writing Programme at Syracuse University.