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In his brief career -- he died at 32 -- Frank Norris introduced fresh and sometimes shocking elements into American fiction. Inspired by the naturalistic "new novel" developed in France by Zola and Flaubert, he adapted it to American settings, adding his own taste for exciting action and a fascination with the emerging sciences of economics and psychology. Vandover and the brute, set in a vividly described San Francisco, captures with harsh realism the dissipation and decline of a fashionable playboy into virtual bestiality. McTeague (source for Erich von Stroheim's classic film Greed) was a radical departure for its time in its frank treatment of sex, domestic violence and pathological obsession, revealing the dark underside of San Francisco's new middle class. The octopus depicts the epic struggle of strong, ruthless California ranchers with the railroad monopoly and its political machine. Twenty-two essays address theories of literature, the state of American fiction, and the social responsibilities of the artist. The New York Times said, "An opportunity to read, or re-read, in an authentic new edition, the work of one of the trailblazers in American literature.
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Edition | Availability |
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1
Novels and Essays (Vandover and the Brute, McTeague, The Octopus, Essays) (The Library of America)
August 13, 1987, Cambridge University Press
Hardcover
in English
0521324858 9780521324854
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2
Novels and essays
1986, Literary Classics of the United States, Distributed by Viking Press
in English
0940450402 9780940450400
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"Donald Pizer wrote the notes and selected the texts for this volume"--Prelim. p.
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First Sentence
"IT WAS ALWAYS a matter of wonder to Vandover that he was able to recall so little of his past life."
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