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Telling Tales »

Book cover image of Telling Tales by Nadine Gordimer

Authors: Nadine Gordimer
ISBN-13: 9780312424046, ISBN-10: 0312424043
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Picador
Date Published: December 2004
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Nadine Gordimer

Nadine Gardimer was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1991. The author of thirteen novels, most recently Loot (FSG, 2003), and nine volumes of stories, she lives in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Book Synopsis

Rarely have world writers of such variety and distinction appeared together in the same anthology. Their stories capture the range of emotions and situations of our human universe: tragedy, comedy, fantasy, satire, dramas of sexual love and of war in different continents and cultures. They are not about HIV / AIDS. But all twenty-one writers have given their stories—chosen by themselves as representing some of the best of their lifetime work as storytellers—without any fee or royalty.

Telling Tales is being published in more than twelve countries. The publisher's profits from the sales of this book will go to HIV / AIDS preventive education and for medical treatment for people living with the suffering this pandemic infection brings to our contemporary world. So when you buy this unique anthology of renowned storytellers as a gift or for your own reading pleasure, you are also making a gift to combat the plague of our new millennium.

Kirkus Reviews

A stellar roster, including five Nobelists-Gordimer, Grass, Oe, Marquez, and Saramago-offers 21 stories in a fundraising effort for HIV and AIDS in southern Africa. Chinua Achebe's "Sugar Baby" is a razor-edged retrospective look at one man's inability to adjust to deprivation in the midst of protracted war. Margaret Atwood's stunning "The Age of Lead" juxtaposes the narrator's watching news reports about a sailor frozen on an ill-fated Arctic expedition with memories of her lifelong friend, bonded since their teens by a desire for a "life without consequences." Now, Vincent is dead at 43 of "a mutated virus that didn't even have a name yet"-the consequence of "things you don't even know you've done." In the powerful "The Ultimate Safari," Gordimer's narrator, a young girl in Mozambique whose mother has disappeared and whose father is in the war, flees with their [HER?] grandparents. They walk for days through Kruger Park, "a kind of whole country of animals-elephants, lions, jackals, hyenas, hippos, crocodiles"-to a refugee camp, where they live for more than two years, so long that the grandmother, whose husband disappeared on the trek, feels there is no home to return to. "Bulldog," Arthur Miller's straightforward Brooklyn coming-of-age story, revolves around a seductive woman selling puppies, while Njabule S. Ndebele's heartbreaking "Death of a Son" chronicles the two weeks it takes for a young Johannesburg couple to get back their child's body, killed when soldiers and police patrolling the township began shooting. Saramago's "The Centaur" is the beautifully wrought parable of the last Centaur to survive, wandering for centuries until there is no longer a wilderness to hide in. JohnUpdike's ponderous "The Journey to the Dead," about a man's self-serving and increasingly awkward visits to a dying woman who was his ex-wife's best friend, is one of the few clinkers. By its nature more somber than not, a variety of voices with important stories. Tie-in with World AIDS Day December 1, 2004.

Table of Contents

Bulldog1
The centaur15
Down the quiet street35
The firebird's nest45
Cell phone65
Death constant beyond love77
The age of lead87
Witnesses of an era105
The journey to the dead113
Sugar baby135
The way of the wind147
Warm dogs175
The ass and the ox187
Death of a son201
The letter scene215
To have been239
A meeting, at last245
Associations in blue257
The rejection263
The ultimate safari269
Abandoned children of this planet283

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