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Fiction Short Stories (single Author)

I Don't Want to Know Anyone Too Well

by (author) Norman Levine

Publisher
Biblioasis
Initial publish date
Oct 2017
Category
Short Stories (single author), Humorous
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781771960885
    Publish Date
    Oct 2017
    List Price
    $24.95

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Description

Norman Levine's stories, so spare and compassionate and elegant and funny, so touching, sad, fantastic and unforgettable, rank alongside the best published in this country. Celebrated abroad, his work was largely unknown in Canada, except among the generations of writers he influenced, from André Alexis and Cynthia Flood to Lisa Moore and Michael Winter, who passed his work among themselves and learned much of their craft from studying Levine's own. His work long out of print, his entire output of short stories are collected here together for the first time, to be discovered by a new generation of Canadian readers and writers.

About the author

Norman Levine was born in Ottawa in 1923. During World War II, he served in the RCAF with a Lancaster squadron based in Yorkshire. He subsequently studied at Cambridge and McGill Universities, receiving his M.A. from McGill University in 1949. In 1949 he was awarded a fellowship to do post-graduate work at King's College, London. He left Canada with the manuscript for his first novel under his arm and spent the next 31 years in England, mainly in St Ives, Cornwall. He returned to Canada briefly from 1965-66 when he was the first writer-in-residence at the University of New Brunswick.

Norman Levine is the author of 2 books of poetry, Myssium (1948) and The Tightrope Walker (1950); 2 novels, The Angled Road (1952) and From a Seaside Town (1970); and several collections of short fiction, including One Way Ticket (1961), Canada's Winter Tales (1968), I don`t want to know anyone too well (1971), Selected Stories (1975), Thin Ice (1979), Why do you live so far away? (1984), Champagne Barn (1984) and Something Happened Here (1991).

Norman Levine died in 2005.

Norman Levine's profile page

Editorial Reviews

Praise for Norman Levine

“If Levine lacks for a Canadian readership, it could be in part because there is no definitive, breakout collection of his stories...that might change with I Don't Want to Know Anyone Too Well. ... If great writing has a mark, surely this is it.”—André Forget, The Walrus

“emblematic of our national literature ... [his] protagonists are forever curious about another class, another generation, another place or culture; about alternative choices that might have resulted in different outcomes ... masterful prose.”—Quill & Quire

“Reading Levine, this most painterly of Canadian writers, is a bit like his examining that Monet. Up close, the stories seem simple, almost anecdotal. At a remove, Levine’s technique, and his themes of exile and loss, of hope and disappointment, of deep empathy for one’s fellows come clearly into focus.”—Toronto Star

“I Don’t Want to Know Anyone Too Well is a delightfully contradictory thing: a massive book by a minimalist of language. . . Absorb these stories as they first appeared, one at a time. Let one sit and steep before you move on to the next. They will stay with you. Welcome this collection into your home and place it on your shelf where it belongs: in among your Gallants, your Munros and, yes, your Chekhovs. Norman Levine deserves it and his time has come.”—Ian McGillis, Montreal Gazette

“For me, Norman Levine’s stories are about the fleeting and yet durable moments between strangers – or among family, who are another kind of unknown. … He is a master at recording the intimate particulars of one person meeting another, at exploring the mystery of what stays in the mind when the other person has gone”—André Alexis, author of Fifteen Dogs

“Levine’s stories are made of things that stick, unexpectedly, in the imagination.”—Globe and Mail

“Norman Levine stands at the very centre of achievement in Canadian short story writing.”—John Metcalf

“Mr. Levine is a true artist, who grinds his bones—and anything else he can lay his hands on—to make his bread.”—Bernard Levin, The Sunday Times

“One of the most moving, most sad, most deeply felt, savage and loving pieces of autobiography I’ve ever read.”—BBC

“It is extraordinary that the most spare prose can contain such compassion.”—London Daily Telegraph

“…a masterly touch.”—Times Literary Supplement

“Levine’s is a subtle, penetrating and quietly compassionate vision of many sad facets of the human condition: reduced expectations, confused identities, stunted family feeling, the quiet ravages of passing time assuaged by an equally quiet appreciation of what the moment has to offer.”—The Montreal Gazette

“[Levine’s] writing is distinctive for its visual clarity, for the Matisse-like simplicity of his images, a trait that owes much to his friendship with painters ... Peter Lanyon, Patrick Heron, and Francis Bacon.”—The Ottawa Citizen

“A marvellous style. His stories are spare but there is so much hidden beneath the surface of them.”—Robert Weaver