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This collection of diabolically brilliant stories, fables, and "impossible interviews" confirms Calvino's stature as one of the essential writers of the 20th century. Written between 1943 and 1984, these several dozen short stories range over a panoply of concerns--politics, the nature of power, the quest for the truth, and the elusive possiblity of human connection.
In "The Flash," one of the short fictions collected in Numbers in the Dark, the narrator steps into the street in the middle of a crowd and suddenly discovers that "I understood nothing...I didn't understand the reasons for things or for people, it was all senseless, absurd. And I started to laugh." Everyday reality reasserts itself, but the narrator finds himself longing for another visitation, to once again "grasp that other knowledge, found and lost in an instant." His experience parallels the effect Italo Calvino's fiction can have on the reader: without warning other meanings, other forces, are revealed under the surface of our world.
In such distinctive works as The Baron in the Trees, Invisible Cities, and The Castle of Crossed Destinies, Mr. Calvino unearthed and celebrated the uncanny, the remarkable, the mysterious. Numbers in the Dark gathers a variety of miscellaneous works—fables, short stories, dramatic monologues, written between 1943, when Calvino was l9, and 1984. (Mr. Calvino died in 1985.) One of the surprises of the collection is that Mr. Calvino's distinctive style (droll, straightforward, exact in its descriptions) developed very early. Another is that much of his earliest work was overtly political, albeit a politics cloaked in fables.
Some of the pieces read like works dashed off and never picked up again (indeed, "The Queen's Necklace" is composed of the first pages of a novel Mr. Calvino began in the 1950s and put aside). Several of the short stories read like early versions of ideas Mr. Calvino would return to in his later, famous works of fiction. The pleasures here are the pleasures to be found in his 17 other volumes: an encounter with a profoundly original, humane, playful imagination, looking at the world with a fresh eye, inviting us to join him in a search for that nourishing "other knowledge" that lies somewhere just under the surface of the mundane world. Numbers in the Dark is a consistently entertaining and moving collection and a necessary addition to any Calvino admirer's shelf.
| Preface | 1 | |
| Fables and Stories 1943-1958 | ||
| The Man Who Shouted Teresa | 7 | |
| The Flash | 9 | |
| Making Do | 11 | |
| Dry River | 13 | |
| Conscience | 18 | |
| Solidarity | 20 | |
| The Black Sheep | 23 | |
| Good for Nothing | 26 | |
| Like a Flight of Ducks | 31 | |
| Love Far from Home | 38 | |
| Wind in a City | 47 | |
| The Lost Regiment | 54 | |
| Enemy Eyes | 60 | |
| A General in the Library | 64 | |
| The Workshop Hen | 70 | |
| Numbers in the Dark | 79 | |
| The Queen's Necklace | 90 | |
| Becalmed in the Antilles | 115 | |
| The Tribe with Its Eyes on the Sky | 122 | |
| Nocturnal Soliloquy of a Scottish Nobleman | 125 | |
| A Beautiful March Day | 129 | |
| Tales and Dialogues 1968-1984 | ||
| World Memory | 135 | |
| Beheading the Heads | 142 | |
| The Burning of the Abominable House | 156 | |
| The Petrol Pump | 170 | |
| Neanderthal Man | 176 | |
| Montezuma | 184 | |
| Before You Say 'Hello' | 195 | |
| Glaciation | 203 | |
| The Call of the Water | 206 | |
| The Mirror, the Target | 211 | |
| The Other Eurydice | 218 | |
| The Memoirs of Casanova | 227 | |
| Henry Ford | 237 | |
| The Last Channel | 254 | |
| Implosion | 260 | |
| Nothing and Not Much | 265 |
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Posted June 24, 2011
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Posted December 28, 2010
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Posted February 24, 2011
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Posted July 4, 2011
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Overview
For the first time in paperback--a volume of thirty-seven diabolically inventive stories, fables, and "impossible interviews" from one of the great fantasists of the 20th century, displaying the full breadth of his vision and wit. Written between 1943 and 1984 and masterfully translated by Tim Parks, the fictions in Numbers in the Dark display all of Calvino's dazzling gifts: whimsy and horror, exuberance of style, and a cheerful grasp of the absurdities of the human condition.From the Trade Paperback edition.
This collection of diabolically ...