Críticas:
"Krause's portrayal of the matter-of-fact cruelty and hopeful fragility of humanity is a critical addition to the canon of 20th-century American literature."-Nebraska Magazine * Nebraska Magazine * "Krause is a brilliant and important writer without a book. His death at an early age cut short what surely would have been an important literary career. . . . You Will Never See Any God is both an act of rescue and a critical consideration of a body of work."-Hilda Raz, author of What Happens and former editor of Prairie Schooner -- Hilda Raz "Although there is not a single ghoul or specter to be found in the fiction of Ervin Krause, these sad, troubling stories will haunt you. He anatomized every part of us: our wicked wishes, our shameful fears, and our tragic desires."-Owen King, author of Double Feature: A Novel -- Owen King "To the rough South of Larry Brown, and the insular snarl of Daniel Woodrell's Ozarks, add the austere plains of Ervin D. Krause. As hard, spare, and evocative as a prairie field in winter, the stories in this collection represent unearthed treasure, the important resurrection of an unflinching American voice. I'm lost in admiration."-Sean Doolittle, author of The Cleanup and Lake Country -- Sean Doolittle http://www.davidabramsbooks.blogspot.com/2014/06/the-great-big-roundup-of-2014-short.html * The Quivering Pen * http://www.omaha.com/article/20140228/LIVING/140228741/1696#nebraskan-ervin-krause-s-dark-stories-finally-see-light-of-day -- Casey Logan * omaha.com *
Reseña del editor:
A farmer perishing under a fallen tractor makes a last stab at philosophizing: "There was nothing dead that was ever beautiful." It is a sentiment belied not only by the strange beauty in his story but also in the rough lives and deaths, small and large, that fill these haunting tales. Pulp-fiction grim and gritty but with the rhythm and resonance of classic folklore, these stories take place in a world of shadowy figures and childhood fears, in a countryside peopled by witches and skinflints, by men and women mercilessly unforgiving of one another's trespasses, and in nights prowled by wolves and scrutinized by an "agonized and lamenting" moon. Ervin D. Krause's characters pontificate in saloons, condemning the morals of others as they slowly get sloshed; they have affairs in old cars on winter nights; they traffic in gossip, terrorize their neighbors, steal, hunt, and spy. This collection includes award-winning stories like "The Snake" and "The Quick and the Dead" as well as the previously unpublished "Anniversary," which stirred a national controversy when it was censored by the University of Nebraska and barred from appearing in Prairie Schooner. Krause's portrayal of the matter-of-fact cruelty and hopeful fragility of humanity is a critical addition to the canon of twentieth-century American literature. Nebraska-born Ervin D. Krause's (1931-70) stories have appeared in literary magazines and two O. Henry Prize Stories anthologies. Timothy Schaffert's books include The Swan Gondola.
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