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In 1998, Avon Books published I Sing the Body Electric! and Other Stories, which includes all the stories from the original collection as well as the following stories from Long After Midnight: "The Blue Bottle" "One Timeless Spring" "The Parrot Who Met Papa" "The Burning Man" "A Piece of Wood" "The Messiah" "G.B.S - Mark V" "The Utterly ...
Short story collections have their roots in medieval frame tale collections, growing into the postmodern narratives of the 1900s. [6] Short story collections either can be authored traditionally by one person or evolve from oral, anonymous traditions that are finally penned by someone. [6] An example of the latter would be Grimm's Fairy Tales. [9]
The story is written without the use of quotation marks, and the dialogue is not distinguished from the narrator's comments. The story is rendered from the subjective point of view of the doctor and explores both his admiration for the child and disgust with the parents, and his guilty enjoyment of forcefully subduing the stubborn child in an attempt to acquire the throat sample.
Category:Science fiction anthologies for collections of stories written by multiple authors. Category:Science fiction anthology series for collections of stories written by multiple authors, by theme, usually "Best of" (publisher, year, etc.) collections or a shared universe where writers contribute by anthologies.
Michiko Kakutani writing in The New York Times also feels the collection is patchy: "Mr. Barnes’s latest collection, “Pulse,” is filled with both gems and should-have-been discards. The title story and “Marriage Lines” are beautiful, elegiac tales about how marriages endure or change over time: stories that attest to the new emotional ...
Malgudi Days is a collection of short stories by R. K. Narayan published in 1943 by Indian Thought Publications. [1] The book was republished outside India in 1982 by Penguin Classics. [2] The book includes 32 stories, all set in the fictional town of Malgudi, [3] located in South India. Each of the stories portrays a facet of life in Malgudi. [4]
The story begins with a confused, chaotic scene inside the narrator's house. Kafka again uses the image of horses waiting outside of a house, as in his short story The Street Window. Suddenly, from a dark corridor within the narrator's own house, an apparition of a child appears. The narrator is not certain whether the child is real, or a ghost.
This category includes works that collect short stories by a single author. For works that collect short stories and other works of fiction by multiple authors, see Category:Fiction anthologies . Wikimedia Commons has media related to Short story collections .