The Complete Short Prose 1929–1989
The Complete Short Prose 1929–1989 is a collection which includes all of Samuel Beckett's works written in prose, with the exception of his novels, novellas, and More Pricks Than Kicks which is considered "as much a novel as a collection of stories".[1] The book was edited by S. E. Gontarski and published by Grove Press in 1995.
Contents
- Introduction by S. E. Gontarski
- Assumption (1929)
- Sedendo et Quiescendo (1932)
- Text (1932)
- A Case in a Thousand (1934)
- First Love (1946)
- Stories and Texts for Nothing:
- The Expelled (1946)
- The Calmative (1946)
- The End (1946)
- Texts for Nothing (1950-1952)
- From an Abandoned Work (1954-1955)
- The Image (1956)
- All Strange Away (1963-1964)
- Imagination Dead Imagine (1965)
- Enough (1965)
- Ping (1966)
- Lessness (1969)
- The Lost Ones (1966,1970)
- Fizzles (1973-1975)
- Fizzle 1 [He is barehead]
- Fizzle 2 [Horn came always]
- Fizzle 3 Afar a Bird
- Fizzle 4 [I gave up before birth]
- Fizzle 5 [Closed place]
- Fizzle 6 [Old earth]
- Fizzle 7 Still
- Fizzle 8 For to end yet again
- Heard in the Dark 1
- Heard in the Dark 2
- One Evening
- As the story was told (1973)
- The Cliff (1975)
- neither (1976)
- Stirrings Still (1988)
- Appendix I: Variations on a "Still" Point
- Sounds (1973)
- Still 3 (1973)
- Appendix II: Faux Départs (1965)
- Appendix III: Nonfiction
- The Capital of the Ruins (1946)
- Notes on the Texts
- Bibliography of Short Prose in English
- Illustrated Editions of Short Prose
Notes
- ↑ Gontarski, S. E. "From Unabandoned Works: Samuel Beckett's Short Prose" Introduction to The Complete Short Prose 1929-1989. page xiii.
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