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The Complete Works of O. Henry by O. Henry

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Tagsfiction (286), American (266), period fiction (265), SF (173), English literature (163), nonfiction (150), English (130), short stories (121), modern fiction (94), childhood favorite (mine) (70) — see all tags

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Favorite authorsErnest Bramah, Angela Carter, Wilkie Collins, Joseph Conrad, F. Marion Crawford, Daniel Defoe, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, George Eliot, Elizabeth Gaskell, Robert Graves, Barry Hughart, Henry James, Jerome K. Jerome, Rudyard Kipling, R. A. Lafferty, Herman Melville, Richard Mitchell, Patrick O'Brian, Flann O'Brien, George Orwell, Ovid, T.R. Pearson, Georges Perec, Edward Payson Roe, Bruno Schulz, Sir Walter Scott, Nevil Shute, Frank R. Stockton, Booth Tarkington, James Thurber, Louis Tracy, Anthony Trollope, Mark Twain, Jules Verne, Charlotte Mary Yonge (Shared favorites)

Favorite bookstoresAfter Word Books, Bookie's Paperbacks and More, Bookman's Alley, Myopic Books, Renaissance Book Shop

About meAnother system of mine, which truly straight-arms sleep, is to rewrite, or paraphrase, Poe's "The Raven" from the viewpoint of the bird instead of that of the man.

Once upon a daybreak dreary,
While I fluttered sleek and cheery
Over many a granule of ungarnered corn,
Suddenly there came a moaning, as of someone loudly groaning,
Groaning at the thought of morn.

This version ends up with the raven trapped on the pallid bust of Pallas just above the chamber door. In other words, the unfortunate bird, lured into the sleepless scholar's chamber, has become a room raven. It was but the mental work of half an hour to figure -- nay, to prove -- that the raven speaks English with a foreign accent, and you can find this out for yourself by simply spelling "room raven" backward, beginning with the second word. This, to be sure, gets neither you nor me (nor Poe and the raven) anywhere except into the bad habit of mental left-reading in bed at night, and I guess I'm sorry I brought it up. (If Poe had rewritten "The Raven" in order to retract something, the result would have been a palinode, I thought you might want to know.)

James Thurber, "The Watchers of the Night"

Real nameArianne

LocationChicago, IL

Account typepublic, lifetime

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Common KnowledgeSeries (150), Awards (215), Characters (3172), Places (662)

Member sinceOct 19, 2008

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Thank you for delicately failing to draw my attention to the fact that Blaise Cendrars is THE INDIANA JONES OF FRENCH LITERATURE.
You might want some of my doubles, which are all Brand-Name Classics By Dead White Males that I've read and can recommend; I'll get a list together at some point.
Please tell me that you're home and jetlagged and capable of little more than drinking tea and ululating into the ether, and not spending your final afternoon in the fabled city of R------- monitoring the statistical vicissitudes of my bookpile. Because the latter would indicate an urgent need for Help of the sort that costs $300 per 50 minutes, self-pay only.

In any case: in an attempt to clear shelf space, I got rid of doubles and old travel guides and stuff I don't actually like - adios, Eggers! - and dated cultural criticism I used to find amusing and about fifty pounds of nineteenth-century literary biography. My native tendency to find reasons to hang on to volumes any emotionally balanced reader would chuck - the Official Report of the Warren Commission isn't an obsolete, widely discredited slab of lifeless bureaucratic prose, it's a fascinating artifact of mid-century technocratic epistemological delusions! - got the better of me, however, and I still need shelves. Maybe when it stops being so frickin' cold.
This is the point at which a better man might admit that he hasn't actually read Adam Bede, which until this morning he had vaguely thought to be an even-more-minor-than-usual Thomas Hardy novel, and prostrate himslef in apology.
I AM BORED AND WOULD LIKE TO PICK A FIGHT OVER YOUR RELATIVE RANKINGS OF ADAM BEDE AND FRANKENSTEIN IF YOU DON'T MIND
NOT TOO SICK TO NUMERICALLY EVALUATE THE HISTORICAL FICTION OF SIR WALTER SCOTT I SEE
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