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The Cinnamon Shops and Other Stories

The Cinnamon Shops and Other Stories - Paperback

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Availability:In StockContributor:John Curran Davis (Translator), Bruno SchulzSeries:Writings by Bruno Schulz #1Publish date:2016-01-17Pages:148
Language:EnglishPublisher:Createspace Independent Publishing PlatformISBN-13:9781517543655ISBN-10:1517543657UPC:9781517543655Book Category:FictionBook Subcategory:LiterarySize:8.00 x 5.25 x 0.32 inchesWeight:0.3505Product ID:SC0Y0C4YMH
In The Cinnamon Shops and Other Stories, Bruno Schulz describes in fantastical, mythologised terms the cloth merchant's shop where he grew up and the bizarre antics of his father, such as turning the attic into an aviary and expounding strange theories on mannequins. Two sides of the Galician town of Drohobycz are seen: the old town full of ancient mystery is contrasted with newer districts that have sprung up in response to oil mining in the area. The language is poetic, heady and oneiric, employing a rich system of imagery incorporating books and labyrinths.
Language:EnglishPublisher:Createspace Independent Publishing PlatformISBN-13:9781517543655ISBN-10:1517543657UPC:9781517543655Book Category:FictionBook Subcategory:LiterarySize:8.00 x 5.25 x 0.32 inchesWeight:0.3505Product ID:SC0Y0C4YMH
Bruno Schulz (1892-1942) was born into a family of cloth merchants who owned a shop on the market square of Drohobycz. Schulz rarely left the town; although the town itself would pass in his lifetime from Austrian to Polish, to Soviet and to Nazi jurisdiction. Schulz became an art teacher there, at his old school. He wrote his stories there, mythologised accounts of his own childhood, the progressive illness of his ageing father, and the family's descent into financial ruin; stories populated by outré relatives and townspeople who testify richly to a way of life now gone, swept away in the Holocaust. Schulz would be murdered in the town in which he was born by a Nazi officer who then reportedly went to a colleague to say, "You shot my Jew, so I have shot yours." Schulz's fame rests on his talents both as a writer and a visual artist; he first gained renown in 1922, when his collection of stylish and erotic cliché-verre pictures, The Book of Idolatry, was presented in Warsaw and L'vov. But it is his two volumes of short stories, The Cinnamon Shops (1934) and The Sanatorium at the Sign of the Hourglass (1937), that have gained him immortality and a reputation as the greatest modern prose stylist of the Polish language.
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform

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