Steven Millhauser
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Books
Dangerous laughter
Thirteen darkly comic stories, Dangerous Laughter is a mesmerizing journey that stretches the boundaries of the ordinary world.From the Trade Paperback edition.
The king in the tree
""Revenge" is a tour de force about erotic love and betrayal, told through the voice of a woman showing her home to a stranger with a disturbing secret. As the once-happy wife moves from living room to bedroom, she insinuates herself into her guest's (and the reader's) mind - and we witness the gradual unfolding of a carefully meditated scheme of revenge.". ""An Adventure of Don Juan" and the title novella transform classic fables into immediate, wholly original tales of romance. The first puts the famous lover on a country estate in England, where he attempts to perpetrate a brilliant seduction only to discover something surprising about the human heart. In the mesmerizing "The King in the Tree," Millhauser explores devotion and denial, casting the tragedy of Tristan and Ysolt as an engrossing tale of a king's infatuation with his beautiful wife - and the agony of her betrayal with his own nephew."--BOOK JACKET.
Enchanted Night
""A hot summer night in southern Connecticut, tide going out and the moon still rising. Laura Engstrom, fourteen years old, sits up in bed and throws the covers off.""--BOOK JACKET. "Others, too, are awakened by a chorus of night voices: Haverstraw, a thirty-nine-year-old failed writer living in his mother's attic; an old woman who lives alone; three teenage boys looking for trouble; a gang of girls who roam the night and break into houses; a lonely young man looking for love; a beautiful mannequin whose cold fiberglass arms begin to quicken; a group of restless children; and assorted dolls, toys, and animals long forgotten in the attic."--BOOK JACKET. "Steven Millhauser transforms our childhood legends of the night into a hypnotic adult tale of passionate enchantment, encounters of darkness and illumination, human passions and inhuman awakenings."--BOOK JACKET.
The Knife Thrower
Whether chronicling the phantasmagoric excesses of an amusement park entrepreneur in "Paradise Park," or the dangerously addictive delights of the largest department store ever conceived in "The Dream of the Consortium," Millhauser's fictions explore not only the magnificent obsessions of the unfettered imagination, but also the darker, subterranean desires that fuel them. From the odd corners of life that persist below the sunlit world in "Beneath the Cellars of Our Town," to views from the heavens in "Flying Carpets" and "Balloon Flight, 1870," he takes us on a tour beyond the everyday, to realms we recognize only in dreams.
Martin Dressler
Young Martin Dressler begins his career as a helper in his father's cigar store. In the course of his restless young manhood, he makes a swift and eventful rise to the top. His visions grow more and more fantastical as he plans his ultimate creation: the Grand Cosmo, in which he attempts to capture the entire world and its dreams. Accompanied on this journey by two sisters - one a dreamlike shadow, the other a wordly business partner - Martin walks a haunted line between fantasy and reality, madness and ambition, art and industry. The Grand Cosmo is his triumph and his undoing, the bold conclusion to this biography of the twentieth-century notion of progress, this mesmerizing journey to the heart of the American dream.
In the penny arcade
The seven stories of In the Penny Arcade blend both the real and the fantastic in a seductive mix that illuminates the full range of Steven Millhauser's gifts, from "August Eschenburg," the story of the clockmaker's son whose extraordinary talent for creating animated figures is lost on a world whose taste for the perverse and crude supercedes that of the refined and beautiful, to "Cathay," a kingdom whose wonders include elaborate landscape paintings executed on the eyelids and nipples of court ladies.
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror - Eleventh Annual Collection
Invaders: 22 Tales from the Outer Limits of Literature
The Story Prize
The Book of Miracles (from The Dew Breaker) / Edwidge Danticat -- The Postman's Cottage (from The Hill Road) / Patrick O'Keeffe -- My Podiatrist Tells Me a Story About a Boy and a Dog (from The Stories of Mary Gordon) / Mary Gordon -- The Zero Meter Diving Team (from Like You'd Understand, Anyway) / Jim Shepard -- Bullet in the Brain (from Our Story Begins) / Tobias Wolff -- Saleema (from In Other Rooms, Other Wonders) / Daniyal Mueenuddin -- Memory Wall (from Memory Wall) / Anthony Doerr -- Snowmen (from In the Penny Arcade) / Steven Millhauser -- Ghosts, Cowboys (from Battleborn) / Claire Vaye Watkins -- Tenth of December (from Tenth of December) / George Saunders -- Something Amazing (from Thunderstruck & Other Stories) / Elizabeth McCracken -- Nirvana (from Fortune Smiles) / Adam Johnson -- How She Remembers It (from For a Little While) / Rick Bass -- The Sign (from Anything Is Possible) / Elizabeth Strout.
The Best American Short Stories 2008
We others
A collection of short works considers the boundaries between real and fantasy life and features such protagonists as a knife thrower, ghosts, and a cartoon cat and mouse.