Catastrophe and other stories

Dino Buzzati, 1906-1972

Book - 2018

"[The author] brings vividly to life the slow and quietly terrifying collapse of our known, everyday world. In stories touched by the fantastical and the strange, and filled with humor, irony, and menace, [he] illuminates the nightmarish side of our ordinary existence"--Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Published
New York, NY : Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers [2018]
Language
English
Italian
Main Author
Dino Buzzati, 1906-1972 (-)
Other Authors
Judith Landry (translator), Kevin Brockmeier (writer of preface)
Edition
First Ecco paperback edition
Item Description
"Originally published in Great Britain in 1965 by Calder and Boyars Ltd."--Title page verso.
"Preface by Kevin Brockmeier"--Cover.
Physical Description
xiv, 224 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780062742735
  • The collapse of the Baliverna
  • Catastrophe
  • The epidemic
  • The landslide
  • Just the very thing they wanted
  • Oversight
  • The monster
  • Seven floors
  • The march of time
  • The alarming revenge of a domestic pet
  • And yet they are knocking at your door
  • Something beginning with "L"
  • The slaying of the dragon
  • The opening of the road
  • The Scala scare
  • Humility
  • The war song
  • The egg
  • The enchanted coat
  • The saints.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The 20 riveting stories in Buzzati's collection feature characters caught up mostly in the cruel twists of Kafkaesque fate. In the title tale, the narrator, aboard a traveling train, passes through towns full of people visibly alarmed at some horror that remains beyond his powers of perception. "Seven Floors" tells of a sanatorium patient who is moved progressively-despite his relatively good health and protests-from the minimal care to the terminal patient ward, while "The Opening of the Road" concerns a group traveling along an undeveloped roadway who discover that their destination gets farther away as they travel toward it. Some of Buzzati's stories have the delicacy of fairy tales, including "Humility," the poignant account of a hermit's encounter with a clergyman whose extraordinary humility proves to be at odds with his true identity. Other stories have the visceral thrust of horror fiction, among them "The Egg," in which a mother's protectiveness toward her child manifests as a lethal supernatural force, and "The Monster," in which a governess's discovery of a terrifying entity in her employer's attic makes her wonder "might other houses, other towns, not hold similar horrors?" Buzzati's varied and immensely satisfying stories will appeal to readers receptive to the possibility of the bizarre behind the banal. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A new translation of Italian writer Buzzati's (The Bear's Famous Invasion of Sicily, 2003, etc.) mind-bending story collection, originally published in 1965.Buzzati (1906-1972) is notorious for his often irreverent short stories, in which characters are revealed like scattered thunderstorms and plots remain unfinished or end abruptly. In Landry's translation, the essence of Italian surrealism and futurism seeps through every word. An array of characters struggle with existential questions; in the title story, for example, a passenger on a speeding train notices that many of the people he sees through the window seem to be alarmed about something. Then the other passengers pick up on the feeling, but the narrator says: "Like myself, the others were uncertain as to whether the alarm was real or whether it was just a mad idea, a hallucination, one of those absurd thoughts that tend to force themselves upon the tired traveler." Here, as in other stories in the collection, the character wonders what is real and what is imagined, and Buzzati often plays with this idea of narrative distortion. In "Seven Floors," a man is taken to a hospital which sorts its patients according to their proximity to death; the closer patients are to the ground floor, the more likely it is that they will die. However, as the story progresses it begins to seem that the floor patients are sent to is based less on medical fact than on a story physicians tell them. Another tale, "The Opening of the Road," features a character slowly disappearing in the great expanse of a seemingly endless road. This is how Buzzati asks the bigger questions: where are we heading? What is real? And does it really matter?An evocative collection that might pull the rug from under your feet. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.