Innocence is lost to unforgettable experience in these brilliant stories
by E. L. Doctorow, as full of mystery and meaning as any of the longer
works by this American master. In "The Writer in the Family," a young
man learns the difference between lying and literature after he is
induced into deceiving a relative through letters. In "Wili," an
early-twentieth-century idyll is destroyed by infidelity. In "The
Foreign Legation," a girl and an act of political anarchy collide with
devastating results. These and other stories flow into the novella
"Lives of the Poets," in which the images and themes of the earlier
stories become part of the narrator's unsparing confessions about his
own mind, offering a rare look at the creative process and its
connection to the heart.