
Windeye : Histoires de Brian Evenson, PB, ARC épreuve non corrigée, BON état
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Windeye : Histoires de Brian Evenson, PB, ARC épreuve non corrigée, BON état
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État :
“ARC/uncorrected proof, some visible wear to cover/binding(please see pics) ; clean text block.”
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Un livre qui a été lu, mais qui est en bon état. La couverture présente des dommages infimes, par exemple des éraflures, mais aucun trou ni aucune déchirure. Dans le cas des livres à reliure, la jaquette peut ne pas être incluse. La reliure présente des traces d'usure minimes. La plupart des pages ne sont pas endommagées et les plis, les déchirures, les passages soulignés ou surlignés et les inscriptions en marge sont minimes. Il n'y a aucune page manquante.
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Lieu : Sedalia, Missouri, États-Unis
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Numéro de l'objet eBay :157068386290
Dernière mise à jour : juil. 06, 2025 07:48:59 HAEAfficher toutes les modificationsAfficher toutes les modifications
Caractéristiques de l'objet
- État
- Bon
- Remarques du vendeur
- “ARC/uncorrected proof, some visible wear to cover/binding(please see pics) ; clean text block.”
- Narrative Type
- Fiction
- Features
- Uncorrected Proof
- ISBN
- 9781566892988
À propos de ce produit
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Coffee House Press
ISBN-10
1566892988
ISBN-13
9781566892988
eBay Product ID (ePID)
110824574
Product Key Features
Book Title
Windeye
Number of Pages
176 Pages
Language
English
Topic
Psychological, Horror, Literary
Publication Year
2012
Genre
Fiction
Format
Trade Paperback
Dimensions
Item Height
0.5 in
Item Weight
9.9 Oz
Item Length
9 in
Item Width
6 in
Additional Product Features
Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2011-029252
Reviews
Time Out New York, mention in "Best (and worst) books of 2012" HTML Giant , Included in "Holiday Shopping Guide: Fiction Recommendations" "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." --Publishers Weekly "Evenson''s thrillingly unnerving books have won awards for mystery, horror, and literary fiction; this is work that''s scary on a deep level." -- Reader''s Digest "The fact that Evenson can move from parody to paranoia and humor to horror in the span of three paragraphs is a testament to his ability as a storyteller, one that can make us laugh and shudder, moving with the same kind of erratic schizophrenia as many of his own characters." -- Brooklyn Rail "For those whose imaginations constantly hunger for genuine nourishment, Brian Evenson''s Windeye is a feast . . . Windeye delivers a complex and varied collection filled with contrasting flavors. Ranging from feudal to post-apocalyptic, it contains some of the best uncanny and horror writing to come out of New England since Stephen King published The Stand in 1978." --ForeWard "In the 25 stories collected in Windeye, Evenson shows himself to an imaginative writer first and formost. . . . Imagine Beckett''s Murphy or Molloy lost, walking around in a Poe tale, then read these stories to find out why Jonathan Lethem calls Evenson ''one of the treasures of American story writing.''" -- Shelf Awareness " All the stories in this collection are hard-edged, tinged with emotional or physical violence and capped by shock or outright horror. Characterized by building suspense and dread, these tales often have a folkloric feel far removed from the commonplace." -- Booklist "Brian Evenson writes profoundly about the prisonhouse of language precisely because he has made that place his home." -- Open Letters Monthly "I''m pulled into this great, unresolved tension that becomes the general atmosphere in which the events of the stories take place. Which is horrifying. And delightfully so." -- Black Balloon Publishing "One senses that Evenson drafted these stories as fuller narratives, then stripped away their surest details until only the most fragile threads were tying their events together, and anchoring them to anything fixed. The result is fiction that, for all it seeming insubstantiality, is weighty, solid, and provocative." -- Locus Magazine "A modern master of the weird tale, Brian Evenson is also one of the genres most experimental. Windeye , his latest story collection, does what all good horror aspires to: reflect the tenor and fears of a given period." -- Campus Circle, "Scary Stories: Halloween Book List" "With his latest short fiction collection Windeye, Brian Evenson once again proves himself a master at creating suspenseful, literary horror." --Largehearted Boy, "Favorite Short Story Collections of 2012" "The horror of Windeye surfaces as characters are kept in endless trepidation about the evil hiding in the basement, never daring or able to grab a flashlight and go check it out for themselves." --New Orleans Review "Brian Evenson may be the king of genre bending, slipstream fiction. For years now he has taken the best of genre fiction--the tension and terror or horror, the illusion and mystery of noir--and paired it with the elevated language and insightful focus of literary fiction, to write some of the most compelling stories out there." --Emerging Writer''s Network "Laughter can be an effective tool of the horror writer, and Evenson is its finest practitioner." -- Time Out Chicago "Brian Evenson is one of the treasures of American story writing, a true successor both to the generation of Coover, Barthelme, Hawkes and Co., but also to Edgar Allan Poe." --Jonathan Lethem "No one--and I mean no one--is better at excavating the strangeness of our everyday lives." --Andrew Ervin, Time Out New York, mention in "Best (and worst) books of 2012" HTML Giant , Included in "Holiday Shopping Guide: Fiction Recommendations" "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." —Publishers Weekly "This book is proof of a master writer working at his best." —NewPages "All the stories in this collection are hard-edged, tinged with emotional or physical violence and capped by shock or outright horror. Characterized by building suspense and dread, these tales often have a folkloric feel far removed from the commonplace." —Booklist "For those whose imaginations constantly hunger for genuine nourishment, Brian Evenson''s Windeye is a feast. . . . Windeye delivers a complex and varied collection filled with contrasting flavors. Ranging from feudal to post-apocalyptic, it contains some of the best uncanny and horror writing to come out of New England since Stephen King published The Stand in 1978." —ForeWord "The fact that Evenson can move from parody to paranoia and humor to horror in the span of three paragraphs is a testament to his ability as a storyteller, on that can make us laugh and shudder, moving with the same kind of erratic schizophrenia as many of his own characters." — Brooklyn Rail "In the 25 stories collected in Windeye , Evenson shows himself to an imaginative writer first and foremost. . . . Imagine Beckett''s Murphy or Molloy lost, walking around in a Poe tale, then read these stories to find out why Jonathan Lethem calls Evenson ''one of the treasures of American story writing.''" — Shelf Awareness "No one—and I mean no one—is better at excavating the strangeness of our everyday lives." —Andrew Ervin "Brian Evenson writes profoundly about the prisonhouse of language precisely because he has made that place his home." — Open Letters Monthly "I''m pulled into this great, unresolved tension that becomes the general atmosphere in which the events of the stories take place. Which is horrifying. And delightfully so." — Black Balloon Publishing "One senses that Evenson drafted these stories as fuller narratives, then stripped away their surest details until only the most fragile threads were tying their events together, and anchoring them to anything fixed. The result is fiction that, for all its seeming insubstantiality, is weighty, solid, and provocative."— Locus Magazine "A modern master of the weird tale, Brian Evenson is also one of the genres most experimental. Windeye , his latest story collection, does what all good horror aspires to: reflect the tenor and fears of a given period."— Campus Circle , "Scary Stories: Halloween Book List" "With his latest short fiction collection Windeye , Brian Evenson once again proves himself a master at creating suspenseful, literary horror."— Largehearted Boy , "Favorite Short Story Collections of 2012" "The horror of Windeye surfaces as characters are kept in endless trepidation about the evil hiding in the basement, never daring or able to grab a flashflight and go check it out for themselves." —New Orleans Review "Brian Evenson may be the king of genre bending, slipstream fiction. For years now he has taken the best of genre fiction—the tension and terror or horror, the illusion and mystery of noir—and paired it with the elevated language and insightful focus of literary fiction, to write some of the most compelling stories out there." —Emerging Writer''s Network Laughter can be an effective tool of the horror writer, and Evenson is its finest practitioner."-- Time Out Chicago, Time Out New York, mention in "Best (and worst) books of 2012" HTML Giant, Included in "Holiday Shopping Guide: Fiction Recommendations" "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." --Publishers Weekly "Evenson''s thrillingly unnerving books have won awards for mystery, horror, and literary fiction; this is work that''s scary on a deep level."--Reader''s Digest "The fact that Evenson can move from parody to paranoia and humor to horror in the span of three paragraphs is a testament to his ability as a storyteller, one that can make us laugh and shudder, moving with the same kind of erratic schizophrenia as many of his own characters." --Brooklyn Rail "For those whose imaginations constantly hunger for genuine nourishment, Brian Evenson''s Windeye is a feast . . . Windeye delivers a complex and varied collection filled with contrasting flavors. Ranging from feudal to post-apocalyptic, it contains some of the best uncanny and horror writing to come out of New England since Stephen King published The Stand in 1978." --ForeWard "In the 25 stories collected in Windeye, Evenson shows himself to an imaginative writer first and formost. . . . Imagine Beckett''s Murphy or Molloy lost, walking around in a Poe tale, then read these stories to find out why Jonathan Lethem calls Evenson ''one of the treasures of American story writing.''" --Shelf Awareness "All the stories in this collection are hard-edged, tinged with emotional or physical violence and capped by shock or outright horror. Characterized by building suspense and dread, these tales often have a folkloric feel far removed from the commonplace." --Booklist "Brian Evenson writes profoundly about the prisonhouse of language precisely because he has made that place his home." --Open Letters Monthly "I''m pulled into this great, unresolved tension that becomes the general atmosphere in which the events of the stories take place. Which is horrifying. And delightfully so." --Black Balloon Publishing "One senses that Evenson drafted these stories as fuller narratives, then stripped away their surest details until only the most fragile threads were tying their events together, and anchoring them to anything fixed. The result is fiction that, for all it seeming insubstantiality, is weighty, solid, and provocative." --Locus Magazine "A modern master of the weird tale, Brian Evenson is also one of the genres most experimental. Windeye, his latest story collection, does what all good horror aspires to: reflect the tenor and fears of a given period."--Campus Circle, "Scary Stories: Halloween Book List" "With his latest short fiction collection Windeye, Brian Evenson once again proves himself a master at creating suspenseful, literary horror."--Largehearted Boy, "Favorite Short Story Collections of 2012" "The horror of Windeye surfaces as characters are kept in endless trepidation about the evil hiding in the basement, never daring or able to grab a flashlight and go check it out for themselves."--New Orleans Review "Brian Evenson may be the king of genre bending, slipstream fiction. For years now he has taken the best of genre fiction--the tension and terror or horror, the illusion and mystery of noir--and paired it with the elevated language and insightful focus of literary fiction, to write some of the most compelling stories out there."--Emerging Writer''s Network "Laughter can be an effective tool of the horror writer, and Evenson is its finest practitioner." --Time Out Chicago "Brian Evenson is one of the treasures of American story writing, a true successor both to the generation of Coover, Barthelme, Hawkes and Co., but also to Edgar Allan Poe." --Jonathan Lethem "No one--and I mean no one--is better at excavating the strangeness of our everyday lives." --Andrew Ervin, "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." —Publishers Weekly "This book is proof of a master writer working at his best." —NewPages "All the stories in this collection are hard-edged, tinged with emotional or physical violence and capped by shock or outright horror. Characterized by building suspense and dread, these tales often have a folkloric feel far removed from the commonplace." —Booklist "For those whose imaginations constantly hunger for genuine nourishment, Brian Evenson's Windeye is a feast. . . . Windeye delivers a complex and varied collection filled with contrasting flavors. Ranging from feudal to post-apocalyptic, it contains some of the best uncanny and horror writing to come out of New England since Stephen King published The Stand in 1978." —ForeWard, Time Out New York, mention in "Best (and worst) books of 2012" HTML Giant , Included in "Holiday Shopping Guide: Fiction Recommendations" "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." —Publishers Weekly "This book is proof of a master writer working at his best." —NewPages "Evenson's thrillingly unnerving books have won awards for mystery, horror, and literary fiction; this is work that's scary on a deep level." — Reader''s Digest "All the stories in this collection are hard-edged, tinged with emotional or physical violence and capped by shock or outright horror. Characterized by building suspense and dread, these tales often have a folkloric feel far removed from the commonplace." —Booklist "For those whose imaginations constantly hunger for genuine nourishment, Brian Evenson''s Windeye is a feast. . . . Windeye delivers a complex and varied collection filled with contrasting flavors. Ranging from feudal to post-apocalyptic, it contains some of the best uncanny and horror writing to come out of New England since Stephen King published The Stand in 1978." —ForeWord "The fact that Evenson can move from parody to paranoia and humor to horror in the span of three paragraphs is a testament to his ability as a storyteller, on that can make us laugh and shudder, moving with the same kind of erratic schizophrenia as many of his own characters." — Brooklyn Rail "In the 25 stories collected in Windeye , Evenson shows himself to an imaginative writer first and foremost. . . . Imagine Beckett''s Murphy or Molloy lost, walking around in a Poe tale, then read these stories to find out why Jonathan Lethem calls Evenson ''one of the treasures of American story writing.''" — Shelf Awareness "No one—and I mean no one—is better at excavating the strangeness of our everyday lives." —Andrew Ervin "Brian Evenson writes profoundly about the prisonhouse of language precisely because he has made that place his home." — Open Letters Monthly "I''m pulled into this great, unresolved tension that becomes the general atmosphere in which the events of the stories take place. Which is horrifying. And delightfully so." — Black Balloon Publishing "One senses that Evenson drafted these stories as fuller narratives, then stripped away their surest details until only the most fragile threads were tying their events together, and anchoring them to anything fixed. The result is fiction that, for all its seeming insubstantiality, is weighty, solid, and provocative."— Locus Magazine "A modern master of the weird tale, Brian Evenson is also one of the genres most experimental. Windeye , his latest story collection, does what all good horror aspires to: reflect the tenor and fears of a given period."— Campus Circle , "Scary Stories: Halloween Book List" "With his latest short fiction collection Windeye , Brian Evenson once again proves himself a master at creating suspenseful, literary horror."— Largehearted Boy , "Favorite Short Story Collections of 2012" "The horror of Windeye surfaces as characters are kept in endless trepidation about the evil hiding in the basement, never daring or able to grab a flashflight and go check it out for themselves." —New Orleans Review "Brian Evenson may be the king of genre bending, slipstream fiction. For years now he has taken the best of genre fiction—the tension and terror or horror, the illusion and mystery of noir—and paired it with the elevated language and insightful focus of literary fiction, to write some of the most compelling stories out there." —Emerging Writer''s Network Laughter can be an effective tool of the horror writer, and Evenson is its finest practitioner."— Time Out Chicago, Time Out New York, mention in "Best (and worst) books of 2012" HTML Giant, Included in "Holiday Shopping Guide: Fiction Recommendations" "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." --Publishers Weekly "Evenson''s thrillingly unnerving books have won awards for mystery, horror, and literary fiction; this is work that''s scary on a deep level."--Reader''s Digest "The fact that Evenson can move from parody to paranoia and humor to horror in the span of three paragraphs is a testament to his ability as a storyteller, one that can make us laugh and shudder, moving with the same kind of erratic schizophrenia as many of his own characters." --Brooklyn Rail "For those whose imaginations constantly hunger for genuine nourishment, Brian Evenson''s Windeye is a feast . . . Windeye delivers a complex and varied collection filled with contrasting flavors. Ranging from feudal to post-apocalyptic, it contains some of the best uncanny and horror writing to come out of New England since Stephen King published The Stand in 1978." --ForeWard "In the 25 stories collected in Windeye, Evenson shows himself to an imaginative writer first and formost. . . . Imagine Beckett''s Murphy or Molloy lost, walking around in a Poe tale, then read these stories to find out why Jonathan Lethem calls Evenson ''one of the treasures of American story writing.''" --Shelf Awareness "All the stories in this collection are hard-edged, tinged with emotional or physical violence and capped by shock or outright horror. Characterized by building suspense and dread, these tales often have a folkloric feel far removed from the commonplace." --Booklist "Brian Evenson writes profoundly about the prisonhouse of language precisely because he has made that place his home." --Open Letters Monthly "I''m pulled into this great, unresolved tension that becomes the general atmosphere in which the events of the stories take place. Which is horrifying. And delightfully so." --Black Balloon Publishing "One senses that Evenson drafted these stories as fuller narratives, then stripped away their surest details until only the most fragile threads were tying their events together, and anchoring them to anything fixed. The result is fiction that, for all it seeming insubstantiality, is weighty, solid, and provocative." --Locus Magazine "A modern master of the weird tale, Brian Evenson is also one of the genres most experimental. Windeye, his latest story collection, does what all good horror aspires to: reflect the tenor and fears of a given period."--Campus Circle, "Scary Stories: Halloween Book List" "With his latest short fiction collection Windeye, Brian Evenson once again proves himself a master at creating suspenseful, literary horror."--Largehearted Boy, "Favorite Short Story Collections of 2012" "The horror of Windeye surfaces as characters are kept in endless trepidation about the evil hiding in the basement, never daring or able to grab a flashlight and go check it out for themselves."--New Orleans Review "Brian Evenson may be the king of genre bending, slipstream fiction. For years now he has taken the best of genre fiction--the tension and terror or horror, the illusion and mystery of noir--and paired it with the elevated language and insightful focus of literary fiction, to write some of the most compelling stories out there."--Emerging Writer''s Network "Laughter can be an effective tool of the horror writer, and Evenson is its finest practitioner." --Time Out Chicago "Brian Evenson is one of the treasures of American story writing, a true successor both to the generation of Coover, Barthelme, Hawkes and Co., but also to Edgar Allan Poe." --Jonathan Lethem "No one--and I mean no one--is better at excavating the strangeness of our everyday lives." --Andrew Ervin, "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." —Publishers Weekly "This book is proof of a master writer working at his best." — NewPages, Time Out New York, mention in "Best (and worst) books of 2012" HTML Giant , Included in "Holiday Shopping Guide: Fiction Recommendations" "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." --Publishers Weekly "Evenson''s thrillingly unnerving books have won awards for mystery, horror, and literary fiction; this is work that''s scary on a deep level." -- Reader''s Digest "The fact that Evenson can move from parody to paranoia and humor to horror in the span of three paragraphs is a testament to his ability as a storyteller, one that can make us laugh and shudder, moving with the same kind of erratic schizophrenia as many of his own characters." -- Brooklyn Rail "For those whose imaginations constantly hunger for genuine nourishment, Brian Evenson''s Windeye is a feast . . . Windeye delivers a complex and varied collection filled with contrasting flavors. Ranging from feudal to post-apocalyptic, it contains some of the best uncanny and horror writing to come out of New England since Stephen King published The Stand in 1978." --ForeWard "In the 25 stories collected in Windeye, Evenson shows himself to an imaginative writer first and formost. . . . Imagine Beckett''s Murphy or Molloy lost, walking around in a Poe tale, then read these stories to find out why Jonathan Lethem calls Evenson ''one of the treasures of American story writing.''" -- Shelf Awareness " All the stories in this collection are hard-edged, tinged with emotional or physical violence and capped by shock or outright horror. Characterized by building suspense and dread, these tales often have a folkloric feel far removed from the commonplace." -- Booklist "Brian Evenson writes profoundly about the prisonhouse of language precisely because he has made that place his home." -- Open Letters Monthly "I''m pulled into this great, unresolved tension that becomes the general atmosphere in which the events of the stories take place. Which is horrifying. And delightfully so." -- Black Balloon Publishing "One senses that Evenson drafted these stories as fuller narratives, then stripped away their surest details until only the most fragile threads were tying their events together, and anchoring them to anything fixed. The result is fiction that, for all it seeming insubstantiality, is weighty, solid, and provocative." -- Locus Magazine "A modern master of the weird tale, Brian Evenson is also one of the genres most experimental. Windeye , his latest story collection, does what all good horror aspires to: reflect the tenor and fears of a given period." -- Campus Circle, "Scary Stories: Halloween Book List" "With his latest short fiction collection Windeye, Brian Evenson once again proves himself a master at creating suspenseful, literary horror." --Largehearted Boy, "Favorite Short Story Collections of 2012" "The horror of Windeye surfaces as characters are kept in endless trepidation about the evil hiding in the basement, never daring or able to grab a flashlight and go check it out for themselves." --New Orleans Review "Brian Evenson may be the king of genre bending, slipstream fiction. For years now he has taken the best of genre fiction--the tension and terror or horror, the illusion and mystery of noir--and paired it with the elevated language and insightful focus of literary fiction, to write some of the most compelling stories out there." --Emerging Writer''s Network "Laughter can be an effective tool of the horror writer, and Evenson is its finest practitioner." -- Time Out Chicago "Brian Evenson is one of the treasures of American story writing, a true successor both to the generation of Coover, Barthelme, Hawkes and Co., but also to Edgar Allan Poe." --Jonathan Lethem "No one--and I mean no one--is better at excavating the strangeness of our everyday lives." --Andrew Ervin, Time Out New York, mention in "Best (and worst) books of 2012" HTML Giant , Included in "Holiday Shopping Guide: Fiction Recommendations" "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." —Publishers Weekly "Evenson's thrillingly unnerving books have won awards for mystery, horror, and literary fiction; this is work that's scary on a deep level." — Reader''s Digest "The fact that Evenson can move from parody to paranoia and humor to horror in the span of three paragraphs is a testament to his ability as a storyteller, one that can make us laugh and shudder, moving with the same kind of erratic schizophrenia as many of his own characters." — Brooklyn Rail "For those whose imaginations constantly hunger for genuine nourishment, Brian Evenson''s Windeye is a feast . . . Windeye delivers a complex and varied collection filled with contrasting flavors. Ranging from feudal to post-apocalyptic, it contains some of the best uncanny and horror writing to come out of New England since Stephen King published The Stand in 1978." —ForeWard "In the 25 stories collected in Windeye, Evenson shows himself to an imaginative writer first and formost. . . . Imagine Beckett''s Murphy or Molloy lost, walking around in a Poe tale, then read these stories to find out why Jonathan Lethem calls Evenson ''one of the treasures of American story writing.''" — Shelf Awareness " All the stories in this collection are hard-edged, tinged with emotional or physical violence and capped by shock or outright horror. Characterized by building suspense and dread, these tales often have a folkloric feel far removed from the commonplace." — Booklist "Brian Evenson writes profoundly about the prisonhouse of language precisely because he has made that place his home." — Open Letters Monthly "I''m pulled into this great, unresolved tension that becomes the general atmosphere in which the events of the stories take place. Which is horrifying. And delightfully so." — Black Balloon Publishing "One senses that Evenson drafted these stories as fuller narratives, then stripped away their surest details until only the most fragile threads were tying their events together, and anchoring them to anything fixed. The result is fiction that, for all it seeming insubstantiality, is weighty, solid, and provocative." — Locus Magazine A modern master of the weird tale, Brian Evenson is also one of the genres most experimental. Windeye , his latest story collection, does what all good horror aspires to: reflect the tenor and fears of a given period." — Campus Circle, Scary Stories: Halloween Book List" With his latest short fiction collection Windeye, Brian Evenson once again proves himself a master at creating suspenseful, literary horror." —Largehearted Boy, Favorite Short Story Collections of 2012" The horror of Windeye surfaces as characters are kept in endless trepidation about the evil hiding in the basement, never daring or able to grab a flashlight and go check it out for themselves." —New Orleans Review "Brian Evenson may be the king of genre bending, slipstream fiction. For years now he has taken the best of genre fiction—the tension and terror or horror, the illusion and mystery of noir—and paired it with the elevated language and insightful focus of literary fiction, to write some of the most compelling stories out there." —Emerging Writer''s Network "Laughter can be an effective tool of the horror writer, and Evenson is its finest practitioner." — Time Out Chicago Brian Evenson is one of the treasures of American story writing, a true successor both to the generation of Coover, Barthelme, Hawkes and Co., but also to Edgar Allan Poe." —Jonathan Lethem "No one—and I mean no one—is better at excavating the strangeness of our everyday lives." —Andrew Ervin, Time Out New York, mention in "Best (and worst) books of 2012" HTML Giant , Included in "Holiday Shopping Guide: Fiction Recommendations" "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." --Publishers Weekly "This book is proof of a master writer working at his best." --NewPages "All the stories in this collection are hard-edged, tinged with emotional or physical violence and capped by shock or outright horror. Characterized by building suspense and dread, these tales often have a folkloric feel far removed from the commonplace." --Booklist "For those whose imaginations constantly hunger for genuine nourishment, Brian Evenson's Windeye is a feast. . . . Windeye delivers a complex and varied collection filled with contrasting flavors. Ranging from feudal to post-apocalyptic, it contains some of the best uncanny and horror writing to come out of New England since Stephen King published The Stand in 1978." --ForeWard "The fact that Evenson can move from parody to paranoia and humor to horror in the span of three paragraphs is a testament to his ability as a storyteller, on that can make us laugh and shudder, moving with the same kind of erratic schizophrenia as many of his own characters." -- Brooklyn Rail "In the 25 stories collected in Windeye , Evenson shows himself to an imaginative writer first and foremost. . . . Imagine Beckett's Murphy or Molloy lost, walking around in a Poe tale, then read these stories to find out why Jonathan Lethem calls Evenson 'one of the treasures of American story writing.'" -- Shelf Awareness "No one--and I mean no one--is better at excavating the strangeness of our everyday lives." --Andrew Ervin "Brian Evenson writes profoundly about the prisonhouse of language precisely because he has made that place his home." -- Open Letters Monthly "I'm pulled into this great, unresolved tension that becomes the general atmosphere in which the events of the stories take place. Which is horrifying. And delightfully so." -- Black Balloon Publishing "One senses that Evenson drafted these stories as fuller narratives, then stripped away their surest details until only the most fragile threads were tying their events together, and anchoring them to anything fixed. The result is fiction that, for all its seeming insubstantiality, is weighty, solid, and provocative." - Locus Magazine "A modern master of the weird tale, Brian Evenson is also one of the genres most experimental. Windeye , his latest story collection, does what all good horror aspires to: reflect the tenor and fears of a given period."-- Campus Circle , "Scary Stories: Halloween Book List" "With his latest short fiction collection Windeye , Brian Evenson once again proves himself a master at creating suspenseful, literary horror."-- Largehearted Boy , "Favorite Short Story Collections of 2012" "The horror of Windeye surfaces as characters are kept in endless trepidation about the evil hiding in the basement, never daring or able to grab a flashflight and go check it out for themselves." --New Orleans Review, Time Out New York, mention in "Best (and worst) books of 2012" HTML Giant , Included in "Holiday Shopping Guide: Fiction Recommendations" "Both smartly referential and admirably distinct in voice . . . these are stories of madness told from the inside, and they often read like dreams." --Publishers Weekly "Evenson's thrillingly unnerving books have won awards for mystery, horror, and literary fiction; this is work that's scary on a deep level." -- Reader''s Digest "The fact that Evenson can move from parody to paranoia and humor to horror in the span of three paragraphs is a testament to his ability as a storyteller, one that can make us laugh and shudder, moving with the same kind of erratic schizophrenia as many of his own characters." -- Brooklyn Rail "For those whose imaginations constantly hunger for genuine nourishment, Brian Evenson''s Windeye is a feast . . . Windeye delivers a complex and varied collection filled with contrasting flavors. Ranging from feudal to post-apocalyptic, it contains some of the best uncanny and horror writing to come out of New England since Stephen King published The Stand in 1978." --ForeWard "In the 25 stories collected in Windeye, Evenson shows himself to an imaginative writer first and formost. . . . Imagine Beckett''s Murphy or Molloy lost, walking around in a Poe tale, then read these stories to find out why Jonathan Lethem calls Evenson ''one of the treasures of American story writing.''" -- Shelf Awareness " All the stories in this collection are hard-edged, tinged with emotional or physical violence and capped by shock or outright horror. Characterized by building suspense and dread, these tales often have a folkloric feel far removed from the commonplace." -- Booklist "Brian Evenson writes profoundly about the prisonhouse of language precisely because he has made that place his home." -- Open Letters Monthly "I''m pulled into this great, unresolved tension that becomes the general atmosphere in which the events of the stories take place. Which is horrifying. And delightfully so." -- Black Balloon Publishing "One senses that Evenson drafted these stories as fuller narratives, then stripped away their surest details until only the most fragile threads were tying their events together, and anchoring them to anything fixed. The result is fiction that, for all it seeming insubstantiality, is weighty, solid, and provocative." -- Locus Magazine "A modern master of the weird tale, Brian Evenson is also one of the genres most experimental. Windeye , his latest story collection, does what all good horror aspires to: reflect the tenor and fears of a given period." -- Campus Circle, "Scary Stories: Halloween Book List" "With his latest short fiction collection Windeye, Brian Evenson once again proves himself a master at creating suspenseful, literary horror." --Largehearted Boy, "Favorite Short Story Collections of 2012" "The horror of Windeye surfaces as characters are kept in endless trepidation about the evil hiding in the basement, never daring or able to grab a flashlight and go check it out for themselves." --New Orleans Review "Brian Evenson may be the king of genre bending, slipstream fiction. For years now he has taken the best of genre fiction--the tension and terror or horror, the illusion and mystery of noir--and paired it with the elevated language and insightful focus of literary fiction, to write some of the most compelling stories out there." --Emerging Writer''s Network "Laughter can be an effective tool of the horror writer, and Evenson is its finest practitioner." -- Time Out Chicago "Brian Evenson is one of the treasures of American story writing, a true successor both to the generation of Coover, Barthelme, Hawkes and Co., but also to Edgar Allan Poe." --Jonathan Lethem "No one--and I mean no one--is better at excavating the strangeness of our everyday lives." --Andrew Ervin
Synopsis
A woman falling out of sync with the world; a king's servant hypnotized by his murderous horse; a transplanted ear with a mind of its own-the characters in these stories live as interlopers in a world shaped by mysterious disappearances and unfathomable discrepancies between the real and imagined. Brian Evenson, master of literary horror, presents his most far-ranging collection to date, exploring how humans can persist in an increasingly unreal world. Haunting, gripping, and psychologically fierce, these tales illuminate a dark and unsettling side of humanity., "Brian Evenson is one of the treasures of American story writing, a true successor both to the generation of Coover, Barthelme, Hawkes and Co., but also to Edgar Allan Poe." --Jonathan Lethem A woman falling out of sync with the world; a king's servant hypnotized by his murderous horse; a transplanted ear with a mind of its own--the characters in these stories live as interlopers in a world shaped by mysterious disappearances and unfathomable discrepancies between the real and imagined. Brian Evenson, master of literary horror, presents his most far-ranging collection to date, exploring how humans can persist in an increasingly unreal world. Haunting, gripping, and psychologically fierce, these tales illuminate a dark and unsettling side of humanity. Praised by Peter Straub for going "furthest out on the sheerest, least sheltered narrative precipice," Brian Evenson is the author of ten books of fiction. He has been a finalist for the Edgar Award, the Shirley Jackson Award, and the World Fantasy Award, and the winner of the International Horror Guild Award, and the American Library Association's award for Best Horror Novel. Fugue State was named one of Time Out New York 's Best Books of 2009. The recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship and three O. Henry Prizes, including one for the title story in "Windeye," Evenson lives in Providence, Rhode Island, where he directs Brown University's Literary Arts Department., Cormac McCarthy meets The Twilight Zone . A modern-day Hawthorne, Evenson is a writer people will claim they discovered early.
LC Classification Number
PS3555.V326W56 2012
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