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Vital Signs: Collected Novellas
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Vital Signs: Collected Novellas in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $20.99
Original price: $25.99

Coles
Vital Signs: Collected Novellas in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $20.99
Original price: $25.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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A reSet original. Vital Signs brings together the collected novellas by John Metcalf, a modern master of the form, a writer who Alice Munro has said "often comes as close to the baffling comedy of human experience as a writer can get." Ranging from early words like "The Lady Who Sold Furniture," about an amoral housekeeper who fences the furniture of her employers, to "Forde Abroad," a mature piece that follows Metcalf's alter-ego, writer Robert Forde, as he stumbles through the Iron Curtain to attend a meeting of the Literary and Cultural Association of Slovenia, the novellas serve as the perfect introduction to Metcalf's acclaimed literary style—and as a companion piece to The Museum at the End of the World , his first full-length collection of fiction in three decades. Elegant, wry, compassionate, and mischievous, with echoes of Kingsley Amis, Evelyn Waugh, and Muriel Spark, Vital Signs taps the funny bone, pierces the heart, and demonstrates why Metcalf has long been considered among the greatest—and most contentious—figures in Canadian literature.
A reSet original. Vital Signs brings together the collected novellas by John Metcalf, a modern master of the form, a writer who Alice Munro has said "often comes as close to the baffling comedy of human experience as a writer can get." Ranging from early words like "The Lady Who Sold Furniture," about an amoral housekeeper who fences the furniture of her employers, to "Forde Abroad," a mature piece that follows Metcalf's alter-ego, writer Robert Forde, as he stumbles through the Iron Curtain to attend a meeting of the Literary and Cultural Association of Slovenia, the novellas serve as the perfect introduction to Metcalf's acclaimed literary style—and as a companion piece to The Museum at the End of the World , his first full-length collection of fiction in three decades. Elegant, wry, compassionate, and mischievous, with echoes of Kingsley Amis, Evelyn Waugh, and Muriel Spark, Vital Signs taps the funny bone, pierces the heart, and demonstrates why Metcalf has long been considered among the greatest—and most contentious—figures in Canadian literature.






















