Sad Stories Of The Death Of Kings
By (Author) Barry Gifford
Seven Stories Press,U.S.
Seven Stories Press,U.S.
1st August 2011
United States
General
Fiction
813.54
Paperback
208
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
195g
Roy is a lover of adventure movies, a budding writer and a young man slowly coming of age without the benefit of a father. Surrounding him - for better or worse - is the adult world of post-war Chicago, a city haunted by violence, poverty and the redeeming power of the imagination. Mixing memoir with fiction, the 42 short stories in Sad Stories of the Death of Kings bring a city - and a boy's growing consciousness - to vivid, unflinching life.
Gifford's work falls into two camps: the edgy, wildly eccentric stories, full of weirdness and perversity but portraying characters who exude a bedrock humanity and the more realistic, coming-of-age tales that find young innocents thrust with open eyes into a world of pain. His latest collection of stories falls squarely into the second category Like Gifford, [Roy] always finds the warm hearts beating beneath the sadness. Booklist
Deliciously Giffordesque, full of sudden and swift-passing flares of insight, as if lit from within by match flame. Jonathan Kiefer,San Francisco Weekly
Gifford's great talent captures defining moments with the casual grace of anecdote. [He] makes the anecdotal monumental. Jonathan Keats,San Francisco Magazine
Barry Gifford'sSad Stories of the Death of Kingsgleams like a stolen silver dollar; one boy's search for wisdom among the hustlers, criminals, and wise guys that reads as evocatively as anything out of Nelson Algren. These stories, sometimes only a page or two, riddled with sharp, subtle dialogue, all glow with the devastating, sometimes gruesome wisdom of Sherwood Anderson and Flannery O'Connor. Joe Meno, author ofThe Great PerhapsandHairstyles of the Damned
The author of more than forty works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, which have been translated into over twenty-five languages,BARRY GIFFORDwrites distinctly American stories for readers around the globe. From screenplays and librettos to his acclaimed Sailor and Lula novels, Gifford's writing is as distinctive as it is difficult to classify. Born in the Seneca Hotel on Chicago's Near North Side, he relocated in his adolescence to New Orleans. The move proved significant- throughout his career, Gifford's fiction-part-noir, part-picaresque, always entertaining-is born of the clash between what he has referred to as his "Northern Side" and "Southern Side." Gifford has been recipient of awards from PEN, the National Endowment for the Arts, the American Library Association, the Writers Guild of America and the Christopher Isherwood Foundation. His novelWild at Heartwas adapted into the 1990 Palme d'Or-winning film of the same name. Gifford lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.