“The bilingual edition of A worldly country, two years after its appearance as A worldly country, silences all reservations about the hypothetical decadence of this octogenarian, who questions in his work the securities sanctioned by custom. There is no loss in the ambition of the effort or any symptom of aesthetic decline. The poems,
“The prestige and fame of Ann Beattie (Washington, 1947) rest on many stories that, since the mid-1970s, established her as The Representative Writer of New Yorker-style fiction. Ann Beattie as that more or less direct heiress of John Updike (who in turn descended from John O'Hara and John Cheever)
“The man in the gray flannel suit” by Sloan Wilson “The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit, by Sloan Wilson, is a novel about the American search for purpose in a world dominated by business. Tom and Betsy Rath share a struggle to find contentment in their hectic and material culture while several other characters
“Proulx's West is gritty realism and has the expected characters: rough ranchers, dislocated and withered Indians, bartenders who have seen it all from the bar, business tycoons enriched by lack of scruples. In its large spaces, loneliness seems to be one more component of the landscape, and pain an attenuated form.
“Who will run the frog hospital?” by Lorrie Moore “Who Will Run the Frog Hospital? Follows the lives of Berie, an American woman visiting Paris with her husband de ella, and Sils, her best friend de ella from childhood, as they take their first exhilarating steps into adulthood. Extracted from the Faber publishing house. See also: http://www.elpais.com/articulo/narrativa/ries/elpbabnar/20030201elpbabnar_3/Tes http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/lorrie_moore/index.html http ://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorrie_Moore The titles