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Paperback Triumph of the Egg and Other Stories Book

ISBN: 1500895180

ISBN13: 9781500895181

Triumph of the Egg and Other Stories

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Format: Paperback

Condition: New

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Book Overview

Published two years after the innovative, influential 1919 masterpiece Winesburg, Ohio, this col-lection of short stories solidified the author's reputation as a major American writer. Despite their... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Short Stories Must Be Finely Crafted

Anytime we get a chance to read something by one of Hemingway and Faulkner's mentors, it's bound to be a unique treat, but this book will surprise you if you haven't read Anderson before. His delicate use of pathos and delicious sense of humor feel so contemporary. We Loved "The Egg" especially as it seemed to capture the American entreprenurial spirit and its often discouraging results with an especially humorous irony. Faulkner was right--short stories require more of a writer, as every word must forward the author's intent, and Anderson's success here proves that, like Hemingway, he may have been a better short story writer than novelist.

GrandDaddy of modern American short fiction

Sherwood's ghost and his readers may not like the ugly pullet on the cover, but inside is a collection of wonderful writing and story-telling. If you write fiction, read it and learn.Read "I'm a Fool" and see if Salinger was really so innovative after all.

Sherwood Anderson should be more well-known

I love reading short stories, and I think this is the best collection of stories I've ever read. I hope I get these titles right: I think especially notable are A Death In The Woods, The Corn Planting, Brother Death, The Other Woman, and The Masterpiece. There's not a bad story in here, and there are like 30 stories. I find Anderson's simple prose to be enchanting. His characterization is his strongest point; eighty years ago, he wrote characters to whom I can relate and understand today.

How do you define failure and success in life?

Sherwood Anderson knew the definition of such matters. In 'The Egg' (great story!), he uses allegory storytelling and an egg to create the definition of success in failure in rural America. The 'EGG' is representational of possibilities and oppurtunities, and creating that gilded goal so many look for, and in the story, sometimes lose focus of. A must read!

Read this book

Read this book. Sherwood Anderson was very good at what he did. The characters are real and covertly full of frustrations that would be difficult to write. The Egg itself is a wonderful story.
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