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In the company of George Garrett
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Bad Man Blues
A Portable George Garrett
by George Garrett
Foreword by Richard Bausch
Introduction by Allen Wier
Here is a new collection of stories, anecdotes, and personal essays, with a few poems added for good measure, by a writer whose first collection of short fiction was published to high praise some forty years ago. The rich diversity of voices and forms gives the reader a peek into the room where Garrett writes. As the reader progresses through the collection, Garrett's inventive and engaging sensibility emerges in all its many facets.The brief fiction section covers Garrett's extraordinary range: as a writer of Elizabethan-era historical fiction (for which he is perhaps best known), as a Southern regionalist/humorist, as a satirist, and as a technical innovator.
The second section derives from Garrett's inexhaustible store of humorous anecdotes. Darkly and wickedly comic, these glimpses into the absurdity of life in the hallowed halls of the academy approach wisdom in their use of the unexpected, the inevitable yet unpredictable misadventures of life.
The final section contains serious and reflective personal essays, mostly having to do with Garrett's family, and particularly with his father. These pieces are thoughtful, moving, and wise. With the anecdotes, they constitute a sort of camouflaged autobiography.
Bad Man Blues provides a rare opportunity to spend time in George Garrett's company, savoring his immediately accessible prose, and, at another level, indulging in the more arcane pleasure of tracing some of the mysterious sources of storytelling itself.
The author of more than twenty-five books and the editor of seventeen others, including poetry, fiction, biography, criticism, essays, and dramas, GEORGE GARRETT is one of the prime movers in contemporary American letters. Best known for his Elizabethan trilogy of historical novels, Garrett has published stories in many venues over the years, including Best American Short Stories. He has been the recipient of a PEN/Malamud Award; Guggenheim, Ford, and National Endowment for the Arts fellowships; and an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He is Henry Hoyns Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Virginia. He has been married to his wife Susan for forty-six years. The Garretts, who make their home in Charlottesville, have three children and two grandchildren.
Praise for
The Old Army Game(SMU, 1994)"One of the most startling and intransigent short novels ever written by an American, along with some classic short fiction by one of the finest story writers still alive and among us."—Madison Smartt Bell
"A virtuoso display of wise-guy, first-person narration . . . Which Ones Are the Enemy? is a tough, tight, and knowing novel."—Newsweek
"Garrett's war stories stand as despairing little masterpieces on the nature of armies and occupations of foreign lands."—Los Angeles Herald Examiner
Bad Man Blues
ISBN 0-87074-439-9
$19.956x9. 192 pp.
Fiction. Memoir.Publication Date: October 1998.
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