Henry Miller is the nearest thing to Céline America has produced. He aims not at the ears, brains or consciences, but at the viscera and solar plexus.

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The Cosmological Eye

Fiction by Henry Miller

This collection, first published by New Directions in 1939, contains a number of Henry Miller’s most important shorter prose writings. They are taken from the Paris books Black Spring (1936) and Max and the White Phagocytes (1938) and were, for the most part, written at about the same time as Tropic of Capricorn––the period of Miller’s and Durrell’s life in the famous Villa Seurat in Paris. As is usual with Miller, these pieces cannot be tagged with the label of any given literary category. The unforgettable portrait of Max, the Paris drifter, and the probably-autobiographical Tailor Shop, are basically short stories, but even here the irrepressible vitality of Miller’s personality keeps breaking into the narrative. And in the critical and philosophical essays, the prose poems and surrealist fantasies, the travel sketches and scenarios, Miller’s passion for fiction, for telling the endless story of his extraordinary life, cannot be held down. Life, as no other modern author has lived it or can write it, bursts from these pages––the life of the mind and the body; of people, places and things; of ideas and the imagination.

Paperback(published Oct, 01 1969)

ISBN
9780811201100
Price US
18.95

Ebook(published Oct, 01 1969)

ISBN
9780811223157
Portrait of Henry Miller

Henry Miller

20th Century American writer

Henry Miller is the nearest thing to Céline America has produced. He aims not at the ears, brains or consciences, but at the viscera and solar plexus.

New Leader