William Saroyan's debut collection of stories made a tremendous splash
in the literary world, adding an author in love with his own madcap
sincerity to a pantheon full of serious-minded modernists. Saroyan, who
won (and then refused) the Pulitzer Prize for his play The Time of Your
Life, always wrote about humanity, and always on a human scale. He was
also one of the first American writers of this century to focus so much
attention on immigrant communities. The protagonists sailing about The
Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze are often Armenian, Jewish,
Chinese, Polish, African, or Irish; and all are treated with what The
San Francisco Chronicle called "the old Saroyan luminousness, which is
to say with an insight as fresh as that of an unusually perceptive
child."