"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
"These stories are feverish, cruel, and wry, set among the surrealisms of puberty, disability, and precarity." —Joshua Cohen, Harper's
“She lived a little in the shadow of her sister Victoria on the one hand and of her husband Bioy Casares and Borges on the other. She was an extravagant woman when writing her stories, short and crystalline, she was perfect.” —César Aira
“Dark, masterly tales...a (very good) introduction...a (very good) translator...Ocampo’s technique is beyond all reproach; an author has to keep masterly control when letting events veer off beyond the quotidian (the phrase 'magic realism' seems inadequate when applied to her).” —Nicholas Lezard, The Guardian
“Ocampo wrote with fascinated horror of Argentinean petty bourgeois society, whose banality and kitsch settings she used in a masterly way to depict strange, surreal atmospheres sometimes verging on the supernatural.” —The Independent
“Few writers have an eye for the small horrors of everyday life; fewer still see the everyday marvelous. Other than Silvina Ocampo, I cannot think of a single writer who, at any time or in any language, has chronicled both with such wise and elegant humor.” —Alberto Manguel
“Silvina Ocampo is one of our best writers. Her stories have no equal in our literature.” —Jorge Luis Borges
“Silvina Ocampo is, together with Borges and García Márquez, the leading writer in Spanish.” —Jorge Amado
“Unsettling and off-kilter, revelatory and readable.” —A.N. Devers, Longreads
“Magical....Ocampo’s earlier words resonate now with something of the 'clairvoyance' Borges once attributed to her....Mind-blowing hallucinogenic lines...make it important to take the stories in small, slow doses lest we zip by and miss them.” —Jill Schepmann, The Rumpus
“Ocampo mixes unembellished narration and dark, fantastic elements into a heady cocktail.” —Heather Cleary, Lit Hub
“Sublime poet and eminent master of the modern fantastic—her heirs include Julio Cortázar, who praised her ability to summon the strangeness in the everyday, Roberto Bolaño, who declared that he “would live very happily in Silvina Ocampo’s kitchen,” and César Aira—Ocampo deserves to be heralded alongside the greatest Latin American authors of the 20th century.... her prose is intimate and precise, alert to detail.... Her poetic voice is often tranquil.... Yet when her poetry wanders into the terrain of people, Ocampo exhibits emotional dexterity and arresting candidness.” —Jose Teodoro, National Post
“Every story [evokes] a fantastic atmosphere – at once creepy and inviting. Ocampo is a literary angler, drawing her piscine audience closer to the hook with every mysterious sentence until we bite at the bait and she reels us in....Within is a strange world all its own, with memorable characters and elegant prose. It is worthy of becoming a popular classic and not just a forgotten footnote in Argentinian literature.” —Kenyon Ellefson, Portland Book Review
“In the dark world of Ocampo’s fiction, the familiar yet unsettling imagery of fantasy has a sense of reality that reality itself often lacks.... Ocampo can be cruel and cynical, but her spitefulness is clever, and, at her best moments, something tender lurks beneath the sadism. The punishments she cooks up for her characters are presented with unmistakable irony, and the results are frequently comedic and not infrequently touching.” —Becca Rothfeld, Bookforum
"[Ocampo's] poetic sentences apply just the right pressure to turn everyday details vivid, but not lurid...it is time for Ocampo’s dark star to rise. —Scott Esposito, Music and Literature
"Part of the pleasure of reading Ocampo – or rather the thrill, as some of her work is far from pleasurable – is never knowing what the next sentence will bring... Illogic and paradox shoot from the strange soil of her fiction, where dark, perturbing situations thrive... The range of Ocampo’s invention is impressive... Ocampo creates recognisable domestic settings that she then infects with strangeness. In her world a birthday party can become a funeral, objects collected in dreams can be brought into the waking world, and lovers flirt by exchanging stories of death.” —Chris Power, The Guardian
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Book Description Soft Cover. Condition: new. Seller Inventory # 9781590177679
Book Description Condition: New. Brand New! Not Overstocks or Low Quality Book Club Editions! Direct From the Publisher! We're not a giant, faceless warehouse organization! We're a small town bookstore that loves books and loves it's customers! Buy from Lakeside Books!. Seller Inventory # OTF-S-9781590177679
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Book Description Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. Silvina Ocampo is undoubtedly one of the twentieth century's great masters of the short story. Italo Calvino once said about her, oI don't know another writer who better captures the magic inside everyday rituals, the forbidden or hidden face that our mirrors don't show us.o Thus Were Their Faces collects a wide range of Ocampo's best short fiction and novella-length stories from her whole writing life. Stories about creepy doubles, a marble statue of a winged horse that speaks to a girl, a house of sugar that is the site of an eerie possession, children who lock their perverse mothers in a room and burn it, a lapdog who records the dreams of an old woman.Jorge Luis Borges wrote that the cruelty of Ocampo's stories was the result of her nobility of soul, a judgment as paradoxical as much of her own writing. For her whole life Ocampo avoided the public eye, though since her death in 1993 her reputation has only continued to grow, like a magical forest. Dark, gothic, fantastic, and grotesque, these haunting stories are among the world's finest. Thus Were Their Faces collects a wide range of Ocampo's best short fiction and novella-length stories from her whole writing life. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9781590177679
Book Description Condition: New. pp. 336. Seller Inventory # 26132681592
Book Description Condition: New. Book is in NEW condition. 0.75. Seller Inventory # 1590177673-2-1
Book Description Condition: New. New! This book is in the same immaculate condition as when it was published 0.75. Seller Inventory # 353-1590177673-new