Missing Persons, Animals, and Artists

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Product Details
Price
$20.00  $18.60
Publisher
Swan Isle Press
Publish Date
Pages
180
Dimensions
6.1 X 0.8 X 8.9 inches | 0.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780997228717
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Roberto Ransom is an award-winning Mexican writer whose published work includes novels and collections of short stories, poetry, and essays, as well as children's literature. His novel A Tale of Two Lions has also been translated into English. He is professor at the Autonomous University of Chihuahua. Daniel Shapiro is a translator of Latin American literature and the author of three collections of poetry, including Woman at the Cusp of Twilight. He is a distinguished lecturer at the City College of New York, CUNY, and the editor of Review: Literature and Arts of the Americas.
Reviews
"Shapiro has accomplished a very difficult task: he has created a clear, pellucid language in English for Ransom's stories, which are dark and tortuous. The contrast is devastating. The same tension between substance and style exists in Spanish, and Shapiro has been able to duplicate that with finesse, sophistication, and an excellent ear. His translations are a gift to English-speaking readers."--Edith Grossman, translator of Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes and Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel García Márquez
"Who could foresee a series of nuanced and unsettling tales about memory, art, betrayal, and divinity from a volume that begins with a housebound Godzilla? In Daniel Shapiro's superb translation . . . the stories set free at least as many wonders as they define."--World Literature Today
"Roberto Ransom's collection of short stories, Missing Persons, Animals, and Artists, is a trip to fear, to the uncanny, to the limit where we give up our defenses and just relate."--Álvaro Enrigue, award winning novelist and short story writer
"In one of the stories in this surreal collection, an artist is unable to paint some figures in his composition because he's waiting for the right color to inspire him. The painting's patron doesn't understand the delay: Shouldn't it be easy to paint some figures? Thus Roberto Ransom suggests with clarity and elegance that form is the subject of art. Daniel Shapiro's translation perfectly captures all the nuances of these strange and seductive stories."
--Edmundo Paz Soldán, professor of Spanish literature at Cornell University
" An almost understated calm leads readers into the ten stories in Missing Persons, Animals, and Artists--some remain placid, and others reveal an unsettling and often dark depth. . . . A fine, and finely wrought, collection."--Complete Review