The Neon Wilderness

The Neon Wilderness (1947) is the first short-story collection by American writer Nelson Algren. Two of its stories[1] had received an O. Henry Award. Algren received an award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters[2] the same year.

The Neon Wilderness
First edition
AuthorNelson Algren
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreShort stories: tragi-comedy, satire
PublisherDoubleday & Co.
Publication date
1947
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages286 (1st ed.)
OCLC1117160
813.52

Overview

The book collects 24 stories: 8 previously published (from 1933 to 1947)[3][4] and 16 new. Most of them are set in then-contemporary Chicago (1930s and 1940s), in the so-called "Polish-American ghetto". They revolve around the lower classes: workers and unemployed, drunkards and gamblers, prostitutes and hustlers, small-businessmen and policemen. Unlike Dickens or Zola, their general tone is tragi-comedy or sympathetic satire.

Two stories had received an O. Henry Award (and been reprinted in the related annual volume): Algren's second-published story "The Brothers' House"[1] (1935 award) and "A Bottle of Milk for Mother (Biceps)"[1] (1941 award). Two had been selected for The Best American Short Stories: "A Bottle of Milk for Mother"[4] (as "Biceps",[5] 1942 volume) and "How the Devil Came Down Division Street"[4] (1945 volume). The year the collection was released, Algren received an award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and a grant from Chicago's Newberry Library.[2]

Contents

The collection contains the following 24 stories (with first appearance for the 8 previously published).

  1. "The Captain Has Bad Dreams"
  2. "How the Devil Came Down Division Street" (1944, Harper's Bazaar)[6]
  3. "Is Your Name Joe?"
  4. "Depend on Aunt Elly"
  5. "Stickman's Laughter" (1942, The Southern Review)[4]
  6. "A Bottle of Milk for Mother" (1941, as "Biceps",[5] The Southern Review)[4]
  7. "He Couldn't Boogie-Woogie Worth a Damn"
  8. "A Lot You Got to Holler"
  9. "Poor Man's Pennies"
  10. "The Face on the Barroom Floor" (1947,[n. 1] The American Mercury)[4]
  11. "The Brothers' House" (1934, Story magazine)[4]
  12. "Please Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone"
  13. "He Swung and He Missed" (1942, The American Mercury)[4]
  14. "El Presidente de Méjico"
  15. "Kingdom City to Cairo"
  16. "That's the Way It's Always Been"
  17. "The Children" (1943, The American Mercury)[4]
  18. "Million-Dollar Brainstorm"
  19. "Pero Vencermos"
  20. "No Man's Laughter"
  21. "Katz"
  22. "Design for Departure"
  23. "The Heroes"
  24. "So Help Me" (1933, Story magazine)[4]

Notes

  1. That first appearance was as "The Face on the Barroom Floor, or Too Much Salt on the Pretzels". (See Contento reference.)

References

  1. Random House, "O. Henry Award Winners 1919–1999", Bold Type (via Archive.org)
  2. Google Books, The Neon Wilderness: "Algren received a 1947 Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and a grant from Chicago's Newberry Library."
  3. Brooke Horvath, Understanding Nelson Algren, University of South Carolina Press, 2005, ISBN 978-1-57003-574-6, p. 167.
  4. Chicago Public Library, "The Nelson Algren Collection" (1933–1999), Special Collections, 2005 — Partial bibliography with editions and printings, first appearances and reprintings, reviews and notices, etc.
  5. WorldCat, "A bottle of milk for mother" (1941): "From the Southern Review under the title of 'Biceps'. In O. Henry memorial award prize stories of 1941."
  6. William G. Contento, "Stories: Algren, Nelson", in "Miscellaneous Anthologies Index" ("updated March 17, 2015"), Homeville: Bibliographic Resources (at Phil Stephensen-Payne's Galactic Central)
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