January’s Wafer-Thin Books Discussion

The video of January’s Wafer-Thin Books reading group discussion of Max Blecher’s Adventures in Immediate Irreality is now online.

Among the other books mentioned are:

  • Black Forest by Valérie Mréjen, translated by Katie Shireen Assef (Deep Vellum, 80 pages)
  • The Complete Novellas by Agnes Owens (Polygon, 498 pages)
    • Includes Like Birds in the Wilderness, A Working Mother, For the Love of Willie, Bad Attitudes, Jen’s Party
  • A Cup of Rage by Raduan Nassar, translated by Stefan Tobler (New Directions, 80 pages)
  • The Mimicking of Known Successes by Malka Older (Tordotcom, 160 pages)
    • “A gaslamp mystery that takes place on Jupiter”
  • Patrick Modiano, Suspended Sentences (Yale University Press, 213 pages)
    • A collection of three novellas (Afterimage, Suspended Sentences, and Flowers of Ruin)
  • Noon Wine by Katherine Anne Porter (Schuman’s, 65 pages)
    • Usually published in a collection with Pale Horse, Pale Rider and Old Mortality
  • 99 Interruptions by Charles Boyle (CB editions, 58 pages)
  • Mild Vertigo by Mieko Kanai, translated by Polly Barton (Fitzcarraldo Editions and New Directions, 192 pages)
  • I Remember by Joe Brainerd (Granary Books, 192 pages)
    • Also included in The Collected Writings of Joe Brainard (Library of America Special Publication)
  • The Open Door: A Ghost Story for Christmas by Margaret Oliphant (Biblioasis, 76 pages)
  • Kzradock the Onion Man by Louis Levy, translated by W. C. Bamberger (Wakefield Press, 137 pages)
  • The Life Written by Himself by Archpriest Avvakum, translated by Kenneth N. Brostrom (Columbia University Press, 208 pages)

 

8 Comments

    • editor

      What is the copyright limit in Romania? 70 years after the author’s death as in the UK? Or 95 years after publication as in the US? Or something different?

      • 70 years, which is why there has been quite a flood of Mihail Sebastian’s work in translation after 2015 (he died in 1945)

  1. Gordon Duncan

    James also mentioned No Love Lost: The Selected Novellas of Rachel Ingalls who is undergoing a welcome resurgence. It’s why I thought of Agnes Owens but didn’t have the collection at hand during the discussion. My thanks to Brad who included it in the list after I emailed it to him later in the day.

  2. A weird fact I’ve only just remembered–when that Collected Novellas by Agnes Owens came out, Alasdair Gray of all people got all cranky about the cover, claiming it was pornographic (there’s a topless boy on it). Quite peculiar.

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