The Portable Stephen Crane


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Description

"A man is born into the world with his own pair of eyes, and he is not responsible for his vision--he is merely responsible for his quality of personal honesty." In the course of his tragically abbreviated career, Stephen Crane (1871-1900) saw things that his contemporaries preferred to overlook--the low life of New York's Irish slums; the tedium, brutality, and chaos that were the true conditions of the Civil War; the ambiguous contract that binds a terrified man to his killer and the damned to their human judges. He communicated what he saw with the same laconic factuality that characterized his journalism and, in the process, laid the foundations for the unblinking realism of Hemingway and Dos Passos.

The Portable Stephen Crane allows us to appreciate the full scope and power of this writer's vision. It contains three complete novels--Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, George's Mother, and Crane's masterpiece, The Red Badge of Courage; nineteen short stories and sketches, including "The Blue Hotel" and "The Open Boat," a barely fictionalized account of his own escape from shipwreck while covering the Cuban revolt against Spain; the previously unpublished essay "Above All Things"; letters and poems, plus a critical essay and notes by the noted Crane scholar Joseph Katz.

Author: Stephen Crane
Publisher: Penguin Group
Published: 07/28/1977
Pages: 576
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.00lbs
Size: 7.70h x 5.00w x 1.30d
ISBN13: 9780140150681
ISBN10: 0140150684
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Classics
- Fiction | Literary

About the Author
Stephen Crane (1871-1900) was active as a reporter around the world in addition to being an acclaimed novelist.