book cover of What Goes Without Saying
 

What Goes Without Saying

(1996)
Collected Stories of Josephine Jacobsen
A collection of stories by

 
 
"Josephine Jacobsen gives us a startling word-by-word gift. Her characters--human and animal--know edginess and exhilaration. She is unfoolable. Her judgement is lyric, wise, and daring. She looks all around, her angle of vision invariably original, able to switch from the periscopic to the circumferential."--The 1995 National Book Awards The recipient of nearly every major literary award in the U.S., Josephine Jacobsen has enjoyed a career that spans more than six decades, from the publication of her first poem at age eleven to her 1995 nomination as a National Book Award finalist. What Goes Without Saying brings together thirty of her previously published stories. In "Sound of Shadows," she takes readers through the double-bolted front door of a rowhouse, into the narrow quarters of Mrs. Bart, an elderly widow who has folded her life into her dark living room where the sole light in her "one room wide" world comes from the magenta- and green-tinged colors flashing on her television screen. We follow the muezzin's melancholy call in "A Walk with Raschid," an O. Henry Prize story about an intriguing ten-year-old Arab boy who guides a honeymoon couple through the Moroccan Fez.


Genre: General Fiction

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