Stories from a mind-bending Australian master, "a genius on the level
of Beckett" (Teju Cole)
Never before available to readers in this hemisphere, these
stories--originally published from 1985 to 2012--offer an irresistible
compendium of the work of one of contemporary fiction's greatest
magicians.
While the Australian master Gerald Murnane's reputation rests largely on
his longer works of fiction, his short stories stand among the most
brilliant and idiosyncratic uses of the form since Borges, Beckett, and
Nabokov. Brutal, comic, obscene, and crystalline, Stream System runs
from the haunting "Land Deal," which imagines the colonization of
Australia and the ultimate vengeance of its indigenous people as a
series of nested dreams; to "Finger Web," which tells a quietly
terrifying, fractal tale of the scars of war and the roots of misogyny;
to "The Interior of Gaaldine," which finds its anxious protagonist
stranded beyond the limits of fiction itself.
No one else writes like Murnane, and there are few other authors alive
still capable of changing how--and why--we read.