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Charles Portis: Collected Works (LOA #369) by Charles Portis
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Charles Portis: Collected Works (LOA #369)

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Charles Portis: Collected Works (LOA #369) by Charles Portis
Hardcover $45.00
Apr 04, 2023 | ISBN 9781598537468

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  • $45.00

    Apr 04, 2023 | ISBN 9781598537468

    Buy from Other Retailers:

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Praise

“A new volume by the Library of America, edited by the Arkansas journalist Jay Jennings, gathers all these characters and more, collecting Portis’s five novels together with his short stories and some of his journalism, including the parody of an advice column that ran in this magazine. It’s absurdly fun to follow his oddballs and their odysseys, but something more than fun, too. Portis’s genius went beyond character in the strictly literary sense, to reveal something about moral character and many somethings about the character of this country.”—Casey Cep, The New Yorker

“It is hard to imagine a greater or more valuable pleasure-per-ounce package than the collected works of Charles Portis.” The New Republic

“Now the five novels, the memoir, and some short stories, essays and newspaper articles have been gathered together in one tidy volume edited by Jay Jennings, and installed where they belong, in the pantheon of American letters, the Library of America… The comedy is ineffable, inextricable from its context, the ready-for-anything American mindscape. As P.G. Wodehouse is to England and Flann O’Brien to Ireland, so Charles Portis is to America: a writer whose comedy strikes a celestial chord and whose characters, to quote Evelyn Waugh on Wodehouse, “live in their own universe like the characters of a fairy story.””—Katherine Powers, Wall Street Journal

“There won’t be a parade, but perhaps there should be.”—Arkansas Democrat-Gazette


“A meticulously curated new compendium from the Library of America, which collects his five novels and assorted other works, allows for a fresh opportunity to reckon with his slippery, unsettled legacy … In one sense, a Library of America edition of Portis’s work is a kind of surprise ending. It’s tempting to point out the disjunction between the author’s fundamental outsider stance and his postmortem embrace by the institutional intelligentsia.” —The Washington Post

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