Granta Issue 111
Book (italiano):
<DIV><B>Richard Russo</B> returns home to a hometown on the verge of extinction. Up-and-coming fiction writer <B>Claire Vaye Watkins</B> explores a damaged car on an abandoned road and a Ziploc bag of pristine letters. <B>Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie</B> shows what happens when a married man's old flame threatens to return to Lagos. A young <B>Iris Murdoch</B> writes devotional letters to the older French Surrealist and Oulipo co-founder Raymond Queneau. <B>Hal Crowther</B> delivers a blistering critique of the Internet's erosion of solitude.<br><BR>With extracts from <B>Mark Twain</B>'s never-before published memoir on childhood and <B>Colin Grant</B>'s highly anticipated memoir <I>Bageye at the Wheel</I>; new poetry from <B>Seamus Heaney</B>, <B>Adrienne Rich</B>, and <B>Nicholas Christopher</B>; and a photographic essay by <B>Ian Teh</B>.<br><BR>Further works include <B>Elizabeth McCracken</B>'s stirring tale of a young widower and the traces we leave behind; <B>Leila Aboulela</B>'s story of an aspiring Sudanese academic's return to London with his young Muslim wife; foreign correspondent <B>Janine Di Giovanni</B>'s return to Sarajevo to search for a boy she knew fifteen years ago; <B>Peter Orner</B>'s examination of the question ?When does a place become something else?' in Chappaquiddick; and <B>Joseph O'Neill</B> on the breaking of America.</DIV>
|
Quantity
|

|
|