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<title>Donald Barthelme - Free Library Land Online - Historical</title>
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<title>I Bought a Little City</title>
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<category><![CDATA[Donald Barthelme / Literature &amp; Fiction / Nonfiction]]></category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 02 Dec 2013 15:18:09 +0200</pubDate>
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<title>Come Back, Dr Caligari</title>
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<category><![CDATA[Donald Barthelme  / Literature &amp; Fiction  / Nonfiction]]></category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 01 Oct 2012 16:45:15 +0300</pubDate>
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<title>Some of Us Had Been Threatening Our Friend Colby</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/donald-barthelme/some_of_us_had_been_threatening_our_friend_colby.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/donald-barthelme/some_of_us_had_been_threatening_our_friend_colby_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Some of Us Had Been Threatening Our Friend Colby" alt ="Some of Us Had Been Threatening Our Friend Colby"/></a><br//>'I said that although hanging Colby was almost certainly against the law, we had a perfect moral right to do so because he was our friend, belonged to us in various important senses, and he had after all gone too far.'Donald Barthelme is a puckish player with language, a writer of short but endlessly rewarding comic gems, a thinker and an experimenter. In these nine short stories, whether writing about a hairy, donkeyish king or a touching, private gesture of city-sized proportions, his is a surreal, deadpan genius.This book includes Some of Us Had Been Threatening Our Friend Colby, The Glass Mountain, I Bought a Little City, The Palace at Four A.M., Chablis, The School, Margins, Game and The Balloon.]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Donald Barthelme   / Literature &amp; Fiction   / Nonfiction]]></category>
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<pubDate>Mon, 31 Oct 2011 18:40:06 +0200</pubDate>
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<title>Flying to America</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/donald-barthelme/flying_to_america.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/donald-barthelme/flying_to_america_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Flying to America" alt ="Flying to America"/></a><br//><p class="description">Donald Barthelme was one of the most influential and inventive writers of the 20th century. In this volume of unpublished and previously uncollected stories, he transforms the absurd and strange into the real in his usual epiphanic, engaging, and richly textured style. The stories delve further into themes that often interested Barthelme: the perils of the unfulfilled existence; the relationships between politics, art, sex, and life; and the importance of continuing to ask questions even though we are unable to learn the answers. This collection will delight both old fans and new readers.]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Donald Barthelme    / Literature &amp; Fiction    / Nonfiction]]></category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 31 Oct 2006 18:40:06 +0200</pubDate>
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<title>The Dead Father</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/donald-barthelme/the_dead_father.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/donald-barthelme/the_dead_father_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="The Dead Father" alt ="The Dead Father"/></a><br//>The Dead Father is a gargantuan half-dead, half-alive, part mechanical, wise, vain, powerful being who still has hopes for himself&#8212;even while he is being dragged by means of a cable toward a mysterious goal. In this extraordinary novel, marked by the imaginative use of language that influenced a generation of fiction writers, Donald Barthelme offered a glimpse into his fictional universe. As Donald Antrim writes in his introduction, "Reading The Dead Father, one has the sense that its author enjoys an almost complete artistic freedom . . . a permission to reshape, misrepresent, or even ignore the world as we find it . . . Laughing along with its author, we escape anxiety and feel alive."]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Donald Barthelme     / Literature &amp; Fiction     / Nonfiction]]></category>
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<pubDate>Fri, 31 Oct 2003 18:40:06 +0200</pubDate>
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<title>Snow White</title>
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<category><![CDATA[Donald Barthelme      / Literature &amp; Fiction      / Nonfiction]]></category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 31 Oct 2006 18:40:06 +0200</pubDate>
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<title>Donald Barthelme</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/donald-barthelme/donald_barthelme.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/donald-barthelme/donald_barthelme_preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="Donald Barthelme" alt ="Donald Barthelme"/></a><br//><b><b>The definitive collection of a twentieth-century master of the short story, whose unforgettable inventions revolutionized the form</b></b><br>The short stories of Donald Barthelme, revered by the likes of Thomas Pynchon and George Saunders, are gems of invention and pathos that have dazzled and delighted readers since the 1960s. Here, for the first time, these essential stories are preserved as they were published in Barthelme's original collections, beginning with <i>Come Back, Dr. Caligari</i> (1964), a book that made a generation of readers sit up and take notice. <i>Collected Stories</i> also includes the work that appeared for the first time in Barthelme's two retrospective anthologies, <i>Sixty</i> and <i>Forty</i>, as well as a selection of uncollected stories.<br>Discover, in this comprehensive gathering, Barthelme's unique approach to fiction, his upside-down worlds that are nonetheless grounded in fundamental human truths, his scrambled visions of history that...]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Donald Barthelme       / Literature &amp; Fiction       / Nonfiction]]></category>
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<pubDate>Tue, 27 Jul 2021 18:40:05 +0300</pubDate>
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<title>The Teachings of Don B.</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<a class="highslide" href="https://picture.graycity.net/img/donald-barthelme/the_teachings_of_don_b_.jpg"><img src="https://picture.graycity.net/img/donald-barthelme/the_teachings_of_don_b__preview.jpg" class="fr-fic fr-dib" title ="The Teachings of Don B." alt ="The Teachings of Don B."/></a><br//>Barthelme . . . happens to be one of a handful of American authors, there to make us look bad, who know instinctively how to stash the merchandise, bamboozle the inspectors, and smuggle their nocturnal contraband right on past the checkpoints of daylight 'reality.' Thomas Pynchon, from the Introduction<BR /> <BR />A hypothetical episode of Batman hilariously slowed down to soap-opera speed.<BR /> <BR />A game of baseball as played by T. S. Eliot and Willem Big Bull de Kooning. <BR /> <BR />A recipe for feeding sixty pork-sotted celebrants at your daughter's wedding. <BR /> <BR />An outlandishly illustrated account of a scientific quest for God. <BR /> <BR />These astonishing tropes of the imagination could only have been generated by Donald Barthelme, whountil his death in 1989seemed intent on goosing American letters into taking a quantum leap. Gleeful, melancholy, erudite, and wonderfully subversive, The Teachings of Don B. is a literary testament cum time bomb, with the...]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[Donald Barthelme        / Literature &amp; Fiction        / Nonfiction]]></category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 28 Nov 2018 17:12:49 +0200</pubDate>
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<title>Forty Stories (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics)</title>
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<category><![CDATA[Donald Barthelme         / Literature &amp; Fiction         / Nonfiction]]></category>
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<pubDate>Wed, 31 Oct 2012 18:40:06 +0200</pubDate>
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<title>Forty Stories (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics)</title>
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<category><![CDATA[Donald Barthelme          / Literature &amp; Fiction          / Nonfiction]]></category>
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<pubDate>Thu, 15 Nov 2012 13:29:21 +0200</pubDate>
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