The Collected Stories Of Elizabeth Bowen
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Worn/faded, no tears
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings
A landmark collection in twentieth-century short fiction, The Collected Stories of Elizabeth Bowen gathers seventy-nine stories that chronicle the quiet tensions, social displacements, and emotional undercurrents of modern life across several decades of the author's career. Bowen's prose moves with a precise, almost architectural elegance, illuminating the inner lives of characters caught between the familiar and the uncanny — women navigating societal expectations, families haunted by unspoken grief, and strangers thrown together by the upheavals of wartime London. Her tone is at once cool and deeply compassionate, presenting the mundane world as a place perpetually charged with suppressed longing and subtle menace. The stories range from the Irish countryside to English drawing rooms, and each one uncovers the fragile, often invisible threads that bind — and break — human connection. Widely regarded as one of the finest practitioners of the short story form in the English language, Bowen's work stands as an essential achievement for any serious reader of literary fiction.
Author: Elizabeth Bowen
Format: Hardback
Published: 1981, Alfred A. Knopf
Genre: Anthology
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Worn/faded, no tears
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings
A landmark collection in twentieth-century short fiction, The Collected Stories of Elizabeth Bowen gathers seventy-nine stories that chronicle the quiet tensions, social displacements, and emotional undercurrents of modern life across several decades of the author's career. Bowen's prose moves with a precise, almost architectural elegance, illuminating the inner lives of characters caught between the familiar and the uncanny — women navigating societal expectations, families haunted by unspoken grief, and strangers thrown together by the upheavals of wartime London. Her tone is at once cool and deeply compassionate, presenting the mundane world as a place perpetually charged with suppressed longing and subtle menace. The stories range from the Irish countryside to English drawing rooms, and each one uncovers the fragile, often invisible threads that bind — and break — human connection. Widely regarded as one of the finest practitioners of the short story form in the English language, Bowen's work stands as an essential achievement for any serious reader of literary fiction.