Selected by the Modern Library as one of the 100 best novels of all
time
Before Raymond Carver, John Cheever, and Richard Ford, there was
Sherwood Anderson, who, with Winesburg, Ohio, charted a new direction in
American fiction--evoking with lyrical simplicity quiet moments of
epiphany in the lives of ordinary men and women. In a bed, elevated so
that he can peer out the window, an old writer contemplates the
fluttering of his heart and considers, as if viewing a pageant, the
inhabitants of a small midwestern town. Their stories are about
loneliness and alienation, passion and virginity, wealth and poverty,
thrift and profligacy, carelessness and abandon. Nothing quite like it
has ever been done in America, wrote H. L. Mencken. It is so vivid, so
full of insight, so shiningly life-like and glowing, that the book is
lifted into a category all its own.
With Commentary by Sherwood Anderson, Rebecca West, and Hart Crane