Books about Biguenet from Amazon.com



Theories of Translation: An Anthology of Essays from Dryden to Derrida
Spanning the centuries, from the seventeenth to the twentieth, and ranging across cultures, from England to Mexico, this collection gathers together important statements on the function and feasibility of literary translation. The essays provide an overview of the historical evolution in thinking about translation and offer strong individual opinions by prominent contemporary theorists.

Most of the twenty-one pieces appear in translation, some here in English for the first time and many difficult to find elsewhere. Selections include writings by Scheiermacher, Nietzsche, Ortega, Benjamin, Pound, Jakobson, Paz, Riffaterre, Derrida, and others.

A fine companion to The Craft of Translation, this volume will be a valuable resource for all those who translate, those who teach translation theory and practice, and those interested in questions of language philosophy and literary theory.
.
Price: $16.18 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Oyster: A Novel

With comparisons to Flaubert, Chekhov, and Faulkner, O. Henry Award-winner John Biguenet earned wide acclaim for his debut short-story collection, The Torturer's Apprentice In his astonishing first novel, Oyster, he demonstrates the same mastery of craft and rigor of vision that led critics across the country to join Robert Olen Butler in praising this "important new writer."

Set on the Louisiana coast in 1957, Oyster recounts the engrossing tale of a deadly rivalry between two families. To avoid ruin after years of declining oyster crops, Felix and Mathilde Petitjean offer their young daughter, Therese, in marriage to 52-year-old Horse Bruneau, who holds the papers on their boat and house. Bruneau has spent his life as Felix's rival for both the Petitjeans' century-old oyster beds and, as we learn, Mathilde. But as Therese explains to Horse one night as they float in a pirogue alone in the marsh, "I don't get bought for the price of no damn boat."

The spiraling violence of Oyster and the seething passions behind it drive an unpredictable tale of murder and revenge in which two women and the men who desire them play out a drama as elemental and inexorable as a Greek tragedy.

.
Price: $1.94 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Signs of New Orleans
A city's signs give us a sense of place. This book, though not a complete record of New Orleans' signs, is a record nonetheless It is an attempt to preserve some of the city's unique words and images before they get painted over, destroyed or forgotten. These signs tell us something about their own environments. The book contains many recognizable signs like City Park, Tujaque's Restaurant and Dew Drop Inn, but it also pictures obscure and humble neighborhood signs and markings that are an integral part of the city's sense of humor and sense of self. Ultimately, it's a picture book meant to entertain. From Tom Varisco, the creator of "Spoiled", the photo book of Hurricane Katrina refrigerator art..
Price: $15.99 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Strange Harbors (Two Lines World Literature in Translation)
Like sailing into new ports of call, Strange Harbors suggests that reading the world's literature can ignite affinities across languages and literary traditions - and that the art of translation can distill familiar experiences from disparate lands.

Featuring a special focus on Turkish poetry and a preview of Edith Grossman's latest work, Strange Harbors ferries poetry and fiction from eighteen languages and twenty-three countries to English readers. Highlights include: a crime story that unravels in Franco's Spain involving a student on the run from police, the attic of a country estate, and a lost masterpiece by an obscure poet; a Catalonian twist on painter Edward Hopper's noir Americana; poems by a man who barely escaped the political terror in El Salvador that deprived him of home and family; a Romanian story about a bizarre contest at a communist beach resort where the top prize is a paddleboat ride in the Black Sea with a teen beauty queen; and a story about the devastating legacy of Agent Orange on the people and culture of Vietnam. Placed in context by the translators themselves, each selection in Strange Harbors features commentary on the singular challenges and discomfiting pleasures of mediating the shift from language to language. For fifteen years Two Lines has served as a unique portal into the translator's art by collecting a vivid cross-section of global voices and presenting them in an annual anthology of world writing..
Price: $7.22 [Notify me when price goes down.]



The Torturer's Apprentice: Stories

This brilliant debut collection of stories by O. Henry Award winner John Biguenet is as notable for the rigor of its intellect as for the sweep of its imagination. Whether recounting the predicament of an atheistic stigmatic in "The Vulgar Soul" or a medieval torturer who must employ his terrible skills upon his own apprentice in the title tale, these stories decline to settle for ready sentiments or easy assurances.

Rather than add to the massive canon of the victimized, for example, "My Slave" takes the perspective of the victimizer. In "The Open Curtain," a man achieves intimacy with his family only when he recognizes -- watching them dine as he sits in his car at the curb -- that he lives in a household of strangers. Menaced by a gang of skinheads in a Jewish cemetery, an American tourist in Germany placates the Neo-Nazis with a formula he continues to repeat even after he is safely back home in "I Am Not a Jew." And as for love, it makes demands in such stories as "Do Me" that shake our very notions of what it means to love.

If these stories engage the world in sometimes shocking ways, they are virtuoso engagements, eloquent in their prose, surprising in their plotting, sly in their humor. Biguenet shifts among voices and narrative strategies and imposes neither a single style nor a repeated structure as he depicts the ecological catastrophe of "A Plague of Toads," the problem posed by a ghost in the nursery in "Fatherhood," and the ghastly discovery a grieving widower defends as "another kind of memory" in "Rose."

Such mastery of craft may come as a surprise in a first-time author, but even more impressive is the object of his art. For whether it seeks to prick or to tickle, each story in The Torturer's Apprentice addresses its subject with an authority unusual in contemporary literature as it entices the reader beyond the boundaries of the expected and the accepted.

.
Price: $3.48 [Notify me when price goes down.]


John Biguenet: The Torturer's Apprentice: Stories.: An article from: World Literature Today
This digital document is an article from World Literature Today, published by University of Oklahoma on January 1, 2002. The length of the article is 492 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: John Biguenet: The Torturer's Apprentice: Stories.
Author: W.M. Hagen
Publication:World Literature Today (Refereed)
Date: January 1, 2002
Publisher: University of Oklahoma
Volume: 76 Issue: 1 Page: 145(2)

Article Type: Book Review

Distributed by Thomson Gale.
Price: $5.95 [Notify me when price goes down.]


<< bierce ambrose



All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Copyright 1996-2007 CHHS, your place for CHHS, Plano, Texas, 10220