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The Neon Wilderness
1947 short story collection by Nelson Algren From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Neon Wilderness (1947) is the first short-story collection by American writer Nelson Algren. Two of its stories[1] had received an O. Henry Award. Algren received an award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters[2] the same year.
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Overview
The book collects 24 stories: 8 previously published (from 1933 to 1947)[3][4] and 16 new. Most of them are set in then-contemporary Chicago (1930s and 1940s), in the so-called "Polish-American ghetto". They revolve around the lower classes: workers and unemployed, drunkards and gamblers, prostitutes and hustlers, small-businessmen and policemen. Unlike Dickens or Zola, their general tone is tragi-comedy or sympathetic satire.
Two stories had received an O. Henry Award (and been reprinted in the related annual volume): Algren's second-published story "The Brothers' House"[1] (1935 award) and "A Bottle of Milk for Mother (Biceps)"[1] (1941 award). Two had been selected for The Best American Short Stories: "A Bottle of Milk for Mother"[4] (as "Biceps",[5] 1942 volume) and "How the Devil Came Down Division Street"[4] (1945 volume). The year the collection was released, Algren received an award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and a grant from Chicago's Newberry Library.[2]
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Contents
The collection contains the following 24 stories (with first appearance for the 8 previously published).
- "The Captain Has Bad Dreams"
- "How the Devil Came Down Division Street" (1944, Harper's Bazaar)[6]
- "Is Your Name Joe?"
- "Depend on Aunt Elly"
- "Stickman's Laughter" (1942, The Southern Review)[4]
- "A Bottle of Milk for Mother" (1941, as "Biceps",[5] The Southern Review)[4]
- "He Couldn't Boogie-Woogie Worth a Damn"
- "A Lot You Got to Holler"
- "Poor Man's Pennies"
- "The Face on the Barroom Floor" (1947,[n. 1] The American Mercury)[4]
- "The Brothers' House" (1934, Story magazine)[4]
- "Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone"
- "He Swung and He Missed" (1942, The American Mercury)[4]
- "El Presidente de Méjico"
- "Kingdom City to Cairo"
- "That's the Way It's Always Been"
- "The Children" (1943, The American Mercury)[4]
- "Million-Dollar Brainstorm"
- "Pero Vencermos"
- "No Man's Laughter"
- "Katz"
- "Design for Departure"
- "The Heroes"
- "So Help Me" (1933, Story magazine)[4]
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Notes
- That first appearance was as "The Face on the Barroom Floor, or Too Much Salt on the Pretzels". (See Contento reference.)
References
External links
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