"IF WE HAVE A LITERARY FORM THAT EXPRESSES US AS A PEOPLE, IT IS THE NERVOUS, FORMAL,CONCENTRATED, BRIEF, AND PENETRATING ONE OF THE SHORT STORY." -from the Introduction
This outstanding collection of short stories by twentysix of America's most celebrated writers provides a comprehensive survey of the origin and growth of this literary form.
The selections in this volume represent each author working at the very height of his or her powers,producing memorable, brilliant fiction. Each story,too, is illustrative of the growth of the short story form, done to perfection by the writers who left their indelible mark on our national literary heritage.
A century and a quarter ago, on January 14, 1832,Edgar Allan Poe published in the Philadelphia Saturday Courier the story "Metzengerstein," in which he utilized for the first time the techniques of the single effect upon which the modern short story has been built. What began, as an American invention has remained an American specialty: of all the practitioners of the short story in English, the greatest ones, with .perhaps a half dozen exceptions in 125 years, have been Americans.Of the six exceptions, Kipling was an Indian colonial, Conrad a deracinated Pole, Joyce and O"Connor Irishmen, Katherine Mansfield a New Zealander, and only D. H. Lawrence a bona fide Englishman. In the same years America has produced not only Poe and Hawthorne, who together created the short story as a form, but Henry James, Stephen Crane, Sher wood Anderson, Ring Larduer, Ernest Hemingway,William Faulkner, Katherine Anne Porter, and two dozen less welI known but greatly talented writers, who have taken what Poe and Hawthorne bequeathed them and enricheded and enlarged and subtilized and intensified it. Partly because of this early start, partly because of the conditions of American diversity and the nature of American journalism...
Introduction 9
WASHINGTON IRVING
Rip Van Winkle 31
NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE
Young Goodman Brown 53
EDGAR ALLAN POE
The Fall of the House of Usher 69
HERMAN MELVILLE
Bartleby the Scrivener 92
MARK TWAIN
Baker"s Bluejay Yarn 156
BRET HARTE
Tennessee"s Parmer 142
AMBROSE BIERCE
The Boarded Window 154
HENRY JAMES
The Real Thing 160
MARY WILKINS FREEMAN
A Village Singer 191
HAMLIN GARLAND
Mrs. Pipley"s Trip 208
O. HENRY
A Municipal Report 222
EDITH WHARTON
Roman Fever 241
STEPHEN CRANE
The Open Boat 257
SHERWOOD ANDERSON"
Unlighted Lamps 287
WILBUR DANIEL STEELE
The Man Who Saw through Heaven 309
CONRAD AIKEN
Silent Snow, Secret Snow 332
KATHERINE ANNE PORTER
He 354
JAMES THURBER
The Catbird Seat 367
WILLIAM MARCH
The Little Wife 379
WILLIAM JAULKNER
Wash 394
JOHN STEINBECK
The Snake 410
PAUL HORGAN
To the Mountains 425
JOHN O"HARA
Over the River and through the Wood 454
WALTER VAN TILBURG CLARK
The Wind and the Snow of Winter 462
LUDORA WELTY
Powerhouse 478
HORTENSE CALISHER
In Greenwich There Are
Many Gravelled Walks 493