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Stories are always foreign

The book includes all of the author’s short stories from 1974 to 2016.
This book brings together the award-winning author’s complete short story collection to date. From the early stories of Polyxeni to the latest collection, In the Place, the stories span the modern history of Greece, focusing on the themes that have preoccupied Dimitris Nollas for years: the stranger, the homeland, loneliness, the whirlwind of modern life in the absurdity of everyday existence. At the same time, as the texts are published retaining the character of their first draft, the author’s view of the world at that specific time is revealed, alongside the evolution of his writing style. ‘...A wheel that never stops turning: life and the world. Dimitris Nollas masterfully captures the sparks of its friction in his short stories, along with the scars from the burns they inflict on bodies and souls. A valuable legacy in modern Greek literature.” Titika Dimitroulia
  • Author Dimitris Nollas
  • Edited by Iro Makri
  • Cover design The Brood
  • Appendix Titika Dimitroulia
  • Pages: 568
  • ISBN: 978-960-572-137-4
  • Publication: 2016
  • Dimensions: 13.6 X 20.4 εκ.
  • Categories: Literature, Books, Greek Literature

"...Dimitris Nollas’s stories, brief and brimming with imagery, are dense, elliptical, almost surly. Our life is a tangled ball of yarn, as he himself seems to say; I cannot unravel it any other way. His characters—refugees, migrants, self-exiles, some broken souls and others still full of ambition—cross paths in airports, on motorways and in train carriages, in deserted inns or basement bars, confronting themselves, the ghosts of the past, the monsters Europe breeds, and, above all, the lies we told here, amongst ourselves, as we rebuilt our country in the post-war years..."

– Stavroula Papaspyrou

"...this complete collection of Dimitris Nollas’s entire short story oeuvre serves as a reminder of why he is one of the most important writers in modern Greek history and the one who saw all its facets in every detail. It seems there is no corner of the Greek land he has not set foot in narratively – from the suburbs of Athens to the countryside and Piraeus – nor any sort of person – labourer, retired journalist, dreamy writer, monk or street vendor—whose life has not featured in his stories."

– Tina Mandilara, Lifo.gr

"...With Dimitris Nollas’s six collections gathered in a single volume, we hold in our hands the short stories of one of the most important living Greek prose writers. With a ‘plot that stutters’, ‘words full of holes’ and phrases with ‘wires like nerves’, his 57 short stories constitute pure, unadulterated, authentic literature. Rooted in the bloody realities of our history and grounded in the dead-end paths of the human condition, they constitute a profoundly Greek body of work that is at once revelatorily otherworldly, at times dreamlike and at others dramatically charged, and in any case mercilessly harsh:

– Elisabeth Kotzia, Kathimerini

"...Dimitris Nollas’s short stories, collected in an elegant volume that allows older readers to recall his work and younger readers to discover texts written many years ago."

– Christina Drouza, iefimerida.gr

"...A true voice of the Metapolitefsi era, when abstraction was the most important tool of all artists, and at the same time the erasure of reading, rather than the cries that some in vain invented, the novelist Dimitris Nollas achieves a postmodern, minimalist and multi-layered literary feat of quality."

– Christos Papageorgiou, Diastixo.gr

"...Another feature of Nollas’s short stories is the lack of communication. None of his protagonists comes into contact with anyone else, and they all happen to bump into one another by chance, driven by a blind whirlwind. But what exactly do his characters represent in such a context? Well, what else but wandering and chance."

– Vangelis Hatzivassiliou, APE-MPE

"...An excellent opportunity to reintroduce the author to younger readers, and indeed through the ‘genre’ that brought him to prominence: the short story. Special mention is also due to the informative afterword by Titika Dimitroulia."

– Bookpress

"...One of the most significant publishing events of the year is the decision by the great prose writer Mr Dimitris Nollas to publish all his short story collections in a single volume, which indeed exceeds the total of the individual collections: it features a foreword by the author, a bonus section with some unpublished or hard-to-find short stories, and an afterword by Ms Titika Dimitroulia."

– Dimitris Fyssas, Athens Voice

"...An open-ended, ongoing project, then, this multifaceted narrative map; as it now unfolds in its entirety, it offers the attentive reader the opportunity to identify symmetries and asymmetries, hidden passages and associations, echoes, affinities and analogies, orderly and disorderly movements that may have remained unnoticed on a first, unreflective reading. _Stories are always foreign_, yet they are heard through a familiar voice and convey dreams and nightmares, longings and pains, memories and hopes that are shared and recognisable. May the listening remain open."

– Lizzie Tsirimokou, To Vima

"...This comprehensive collection of all of Nolla’s short stories (from 1974 to 2016) serves not only the obvious purpose of allowing one to trace his development over time, but also to identify the building blocks that underpinned his work (the same applies, to a greater or lesser extent, to his novellas and novels)."

– Dionysis Marinos, fractalart.gr

Dimitris Nollas

Dimitris A. Nollas was born in 1940 in Adriani, Drama, to parents from Epirus. His family was displaced by the Bulgarian occupation forces and settled in Athens in 1943.

He studied law and sociology in Athens and Frankfurt, but did not complete his studies as the bankruptcy of the family business, from which he derived his income, forced him to enter the workforce at a relatively early age. Since then, he has lived and worked for long periods in what was once Eastern Europe (1962–1975).

He wrote and directed children’s programmes for radio and directed current affairs programmes for state television (1975–97). He taught screenwriting at the Department of Communication at Panteion University (1993–95). In the 1980s, he collaborated on screenplays for film and television productions with the directors Hatzis, Panagiotopoulos, Angelopoulos, Smaragdis, Lambrinos and Voulgaris. Between 2004 and 2007, he served as chairman of the board of the National Book Centre.

Awards:
- Ford Foundation grant (1975–76)
- Fulbright Grant for the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa (1978)
- State Short Story Award (1983)
- State Prize for Fiction (1993)
- Short Story Prize from Diavazo magazine (1996)
- Ourani Prize (2004)
- State Prize for Fiction (2014)

The Immortals

The Immortals

Dimitris Nollas

‘In recent years, the exclusive electronic, photographic and audio evidence of every event is what has made us forget that distant, according to the Scriptures, which bore witness from antiquity until a few years ago to the deeds and affairs of us all: the recording of the events we have been involved in, the events that define us and shape our character and the course of our lives… And it is always someone else who does this. It is a third party who paints our portrait, narrates our life, speaks of us, writes about us, and gives shape to our face.” Following the success (?) of the cover for The Fairy of Athens, which I designed fifty years ago, I waited in vain for Nolla to ask me to illustrate his next work, or at least the one after that. In vain! ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ I practised the art of cover illustration for other renowned colleagues of the proud-as-punch man; I would sneak a peek at him watching, but nothing (“The next one, Alexis, you’ll do it yourself”). False hopes. ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ Of course, on the other hand, I was his best man at his wedding, I was his best man at his son’s wedding, parties, bars, coffee shops (Dolce), new books, awards, a speech he gave about my art at the Benaki Museum, he bought my works in galleries… A cover, though, no. ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ Until the long-awaited opportunity came. Something, it seems, spoke to him, as he’d grown tired of seeing me like a beaten dog whenever we spoke of publishing, and he suggested I provide a painting for his new book, The Immortals. In any case, the heavens opened. Triumph! ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ And so, our fifty-year-and-counting friendship was sealed – not that we needed it – by my christening his new baby with the image before us. ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ Our dear Mitsos, bon voyage! Alexis Kyritsopoulos September 2023

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Stories are always foreign

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