When I was in college, I read some Hawthorne short stories in an American literature class, and I enjoyed them much more than I had his novels.* So I resolved to read more of his shorts and over the years I've picked up a couple collections of them, the first of which I've finally gotten around to reading is this, a Norton Critical Edition collecting twenty-one stories, plus the usual NCE array of contextual and critical materials.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's Tales: Authoritative Texts, Backgrounds, Criticism |
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Collection published: 1987 Contents originally published: 1832-52 Acquired: December 2008 Read: February 2026 |
I think my other Hawthorne book, Library of America's Tales and Sketches, is comprehensive and thus includes everything collected here; maybe I'll be in a better zone to enjoy these stories when I reread them there.
(I didn't read any of the supplemental material here, which runs almost two hundred pages. I'm not in grad school, you can't make me.)
* It is funny to read that review of Blithedale Romance, which I wrote almost twenty years ago, before I even had gone off to grad school. Oh no, a book where it takes several pages for interesting things to happen! Clearly grad school levelled up my reading skills. Reading a bunch of George Eliot and Wilkie Collins will do that, I guess.
