The Short Version

By (author): Stan Persky

In a volume inspired by Czeslaw Milosz, Stan Persky appropriates the format of the alphabet book as a springboard for musings both personal and philosophical. The Short Version — which, at 300-plus pages is the author’s longest book — is a literal ABC: Persky covers only topics that begin with those three letters, though he can’t resist tweaking the format to include such subjects as Richard Rorty (“Contingency”) and Jack Spicer (“After Lorca”). Subjects range from his travels across Eastern Europe and Asia, to reflections on writers of today. Unafraid to topple sacred cows or singlehandedly resuscitate those in undeserved obscurity, the author provides a road map to a public intellectual’s mind. Persky’s cosmopolitan perspective encompasses Woody Allen’s films, Roland Barthes’s theories of identity, and Italo Calvino’s creation of Mr Palomar. Along the way he covers such matters as the art of teaching as practiced by Persky, his foray into northern British Columbia, and memories of long-ago Gestalt sessions with David Berg. Eccentric, engaging, and ultimately inspiring, Persky’s alphabet pushes the boundaries of creative nonfiction and the conventions of autobiography. This is uniquely compelling reading courtesy of one of the country’s best minds. The Short Version is the winner of a 2006 BC Book Prize.

AUTHOR

Stan Persky

Stan Persky is a writer, commentator on the media, and a professor of philosophy at Capilano University in North Vancouver. Originally from Chicago, he settled in Vancouver after a tour as a merchant marine. He is the author of twenty-one books, which include At the Lenin Shipyard: Poland and the Rise of the Solidarity Trade Union; Buddy’s: Meditations on Desire; Then We Take Berlin: Stories from the Other Side of Europe; and Topic Sentence: A Writer’s Education. He has won the Hubert Evans Non-Fiction Prize of the BC Book Prizes (2006) and was awarded the Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Literary Excellence in 2010.

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In a volume inspired by Czeslaw Milosz, Stan Persky appropriates the format of the alphabet book as a springboard for musings both personal and philosophical. The Short Version — which, at 300-plus pages is the author’s longest book — is a literal ABC: Persky covers only topics that begin with those three letters, though he can’t resist tweaking the format to include such subjects as Richard Rorty (“Contingency”) and Jack Spicer (“After Lorca”). Subjects range from his travels across Eastern Europe and Asia, to reflections on writers of today. Unafraid to topple sacred cows or singlehandedly resuscitate those in undeserved obscurity, the author provides a road map to a public intellectual’s mind. Persky’s cosmopolitan perspective encompasses Woody Allen’s films, Roland Barthes’s theories of identity, and Italo Calvino’s creation of Mr Palomar. Along the way he covers such matters as the art of teaching as practiced by Persky, his foray into northern British Columbia, and memories of long-ago Gestalt sessions with David Berg. Eccentric, engaging, and ultimately inspiring, Persky’s alphabet pushes the boundaries of creative nonfiction and the conventions of autobiography. This is uniquely compelling reading courtesy of one of the country’s best minds. The Short Version is the winner of a 2006 BC Book Prize.

Reader Reviews

Details

Dimensions:

352 Pages
9in * 6in * 0.9in
0.525lb

Published:

August 04, 2005

City of Publication:

Vancouver

Country of Publication:

CA

Publisher:

New Star Books

ISBN:

9781554200160

Book Subjects:

LITERARY COLLECTIONS / Essays

Featured In:

All Books

Language:

eng

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