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William Maxwell

    16 de agosto de 1908 – 31 de julio de 2000

    William Maxwell fue un novelista estadounidense y editor de ficción en The New Yorker. Su aclamada ficción, cada vez más considerada como una de las más importantes del siglo XX, explora con frecuencia temas de la infancia, la familia, la pérdida y las vidas que cambian silenciosa e irrevocablemente. Gran parte de su obra es autobiográfica, en particular lo que respecta a la pérdida de su madre en la infancia, lo que moldeó profundamente su visión del mundo. La escritura de Maxwell se caracteriza por una conmovedora reflexión sobre la fugacidad de la vida y un profundo y resonante sentido del lugar.

    William Maxwell
    Time Will Darken It
    All the Days and Nights
    Heavenly Tenants
    The Element of Lavishness
    Billie Dyer and Other Stories
    Vinieron como golondrinas
    • Vinieron como golondrinas

      • 210 páginas
      • 8 horas de lectura

      Para el niño de ocho años Bunny Morison su madre es una presencia angelical sin la cual nada parece tener vida; para su hermano mayor, Robert, su madre es alguien a quien debe proteger, especialmente desde que la gripe ha comenzado a asolar su pequeña ciudad del Medio Oeste norteamericano; para su padre, James Morison, su mujer Elizabeth es el centro de una vida que se desmoronaría sin ella. A través de los ojos de estos tres personajes, Maxwell retrata a una familia y a la mujer sobre la que ésta se sostiene. Recreando con maestría el ambiente de la clase media estadounidense de principios de los años veinte, Vinieron como golondrinas muestra esas necesidades veladas de amor y comprensión que nos acompañan durante toda nuestra vida. Con esta novela, en la que el autor se enfrenta por primera vez con el recuerdo de la muerte de su madre, Libros del Asteroide emprende la publicación en castellano de la obra de William Maxwell, uno de los más exquisitos autores norteamericanos del siglo XX, y el editor de escritores de la talla de Salinger, Updike o Cheever.

      Vinieron como golondrinas
    • Billie Dyer and Other Stories

      • 119 páginas
      • 5 horas de lectura

      Through seven wonderfully moving stories, 40-year New Yorker editor William Maxwell revisits his native town of Lincoln, Illinois, in the early 1900s and brings back some of its inhabitants who peopled his youth and have, through the years, haunted his memories. Billie Dyer -- Love -- The man in the moon -- With reference to an incident at a bridge -- My father's friends -- The front and the back parts of the home -- The holy terror

      Billie Dyer and Other Stories
    • The Element of Lavishness

      • 392 páginas
      • 14 horas de lectura

      The book showcases a remarkable forty-year correspondence between a celebrated author and her editor at The New Yorker, highlighting their witty and affectionate exchanges. Through their letters, the evolution of their friendship unfolds, revealing insights into their creative processes and the literary world. This collection captures the essence of their bond, making it a significant contribution to the literature of friendship.

      The Element of Lavishness
    • Heavenly Tenants

      • 64 páginas
      • 3 horas de lectura

      The Marvell family is on the move, driving from their Wisconsin farm to visit the children's grandmother in Virginia. The night before their departure, Mr. Marvell talks to Roger, Heather, and the twins about the wonders of the night sky and explains the zodiac — a beautiful trail traveled by the sun in the daytime and by the moon and planets at night. The pathway's 12 sections, called the "signs" of the zodiac, contain clusters of stars. Long ago shepherds and sailors identified the clusters with characters from mythology, and so the heavens became filled with gods and heroes, hunters, ploughmen, and archers as well as birds, bears, farm animals, and monsters. Upon the family's arrival in Virginia, Mr. Marvell sets up his telescope but he can't find the Crab —it has disappeared from the sky! Meanwhile, back in Wisconsin, a strange light emanates from the Marvells' house, illuminating every board, windowpane, shingle, brick, and stone. What could be causing it? A Newbery Honor book of 1947, this extraordinary tale by a noted American author is gloriously illustrated with woodcut-style scratchboard graphics.

      Heavenly Tenants
    • All the Days and Nights

      • 432 páginas
      • 16 horas de lectura

      In settings that range from small town Illinois to the Upper East Side of Manhattan, these stories are distinguished by Maxwell's inimitable wisdom and kindness, his sense of the small details that make up a life, the nuances of joy and sadness that change its direction.

      All the Days and Nights
    • Time Will Darken It

      • 368 páginas
      • 13 horas de lectura

      The decision to invite his Southern relatives to stay proves a fateful one for Austin King. Against the perfectly-drawn background of small-town Illinois at the turn of the 20th century, Maxwell once again uncovers the seeds of potential tragedy at the heart of a happily-established family.

      Time Will Darken It
    • Few institutions seem more opposed than African American literature and J. Edgar Hoover's white-bread Federal Bureau of Investigation. But behind the scenes the FBI's hostility to black protest was energized by fear of and respect for black writing. Drawing on nearly 14,000 pages of newly released FBI files, F.B. Eyes exposes the Bureau's intimate

      F.B. Eyes
    • On a winter morning in the 1920s, a shot is fired on a farm in rural Illinois. Lloyd Wilson is dead. A tenuous friendship between two lonely teenagers - the narrator, whose mother died young, and Cletus Smith, a troubled farmboy - is shattered: Cletus's father committed the murder.

      So long, see you tomorrow
    • The Folded Leaf

      • 320 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      Spud Latham is slow at school but quick to fight and a natural athlete - Lymie Peters, thin, pigeon-chested and terrible at games, is devoted to him. It is Lymie who first meets Sally Forbes, but it is Spud she falls in love with. This signals the end of their friendship and the rift is almost more than Lymie can bear.

      The Folded Leaf
    • It is 1948 and a young American couple arrive in France for a holiday, full of anticipation and enthusiasm. But the countryside and people are war-battered, and their reception at the Chateau Beaumesnil is not all the open-hearted Americans could wish for.

      The Chateau