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Granta 74:  Confessions of a Middle-aged Ecstacy-eater (Granta: The Magazine of New Writing)

Granta 74: Confessions of a Middle-aged Ecstacy-eater (Granta: The Magazine of New Writing)
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Product Description

Granta magazine publishes the best of fiction, memoir, reportage and photography, Every issue of Granta is in print and many issues - such as 'Travel', 'Dirty Realism', 'The Family', 'India' and 'Unbelievable' - are classics. Granta only publishes work that has never been published anywhere before. So anyone reading us would have discovered (among others) Bill Bryson, Hanif Kureishi, Louis de Bernieres, Arundhati Roy and Zadie Smith - long before anyone else. Every issue of Granta is special. That's why it's published four times a year - to keep it that way.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #729835 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-07-03
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 256 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Much of Granta's success as the Anglo-American fiction and journalism magazine of choice rests upon its Best of Young British Novelists issues, which appear every 10 years and feature an editorial board's selection of 20 British fiction writers under the age of 40. The first two issues, published in 1983 and 1993, included the likes of Julian Barnes, Salman Rushdie, Pat Barker, Martin Amis, Jeanette Winterson, Will Self and Ian McEwan. These anthologies have become a passport to success for young British authors.

Whether the 2003 issue will prove as prophetic as its predecessors remains to be seen. It includes some wonderful writing--Ben Rice's story of marital crises among Koi fanciers, "Look at Me, I'm Beautiful!" is particularly memorable--and some uneven ventures, such as AL Kennedy's "Room 506" a novel excerpt narrated by a chronic amnesiac, and Hari Kunzru's "Lila.exe" an account of the development of a Bollywood-inspired computer virus.

Regular Granta readers will recognise a number of the featured writers, including contributing editor Andrew O'Hagan. Most of these authors have yet to attain worldwide fame, although the ubiquitous Zadie Smith is represented with an excellent short story. The scope of the issue generally lies within Granta's house style--well-written, somewhat conservative realist fiction--although there are a few excursions into weirder territory, such as Toby Litt's baroque essay-story, "The Hare" and Robert McLiam Wilson's magic realist "The Dreamed" in which war dead are rematerialised and resurrected in the bed of an aging English man.

The practice of showcasing novelists through a selection of short stories, novel excerpts and works-in-progress is obviously a compromise, as only those writers who are particularly skilled at short fiction will be seen at their best. Teasers are never as satisfying as completed works and a few contributors--such as Sarah Waters and Alan Warner--don't come off as well as they might, simply because their excerpts cry out for context. Anyone who is particularly interested in new British fiction would do well to regard this issue as a reading list, not a representative anthology, even though a number of delights are to be found within. --Jack Illingworth, Amazon.ca


Customer Reviews

Easy to pick up - much harder to put down again.5
A great collection of short stories and documentaries about our fine metropolis. The diversity of its content means that there is something of interest to be learned from every section - even if it is just another perspective on a familiar setting. The mix of short and longer contributions ensures that there is always time to pick it up and read "just one more".