The Fall 1989 issue of Ploughshares, guest edited by James Carroll. Ploughshares, a journal of new writing, is guest edited serially by prominent writers who explore different and personal visions, aesthetics, and literary circles.
Acclaimed novelist and nonfiction writer James Carroll compiles this volume of stories and essays subtitled "The Virtue of Writing." This edition of Ploughshares is devoted to the morality and ethics of fiction. As Carroll says in his introduction, "The ploughshare is the sharpened blade of the plow, the thing that cuts the furrow. But it is also, in our culture, a moral symbol. The founders of this magazine made a moral and political statement when they chose its name, and it is that aspect of the meaning of Ploughshares that this issue emphasizes. It is dedicated to the idea that writing, and in particular, the writing of fiction, is a morally serious enterprise; and more than that, that fiction inevitably involves us in a mode of thinking which is, at its core, thinking about morality." With fiction from Tony Ardizzone, Jennifer Egan, Alice Hoffman, Ward Just, George Packer, Pamela Painter, and Annie Dillard.
INTRODUCTION
James Carroll
ESSAYS
"Volcano," by Annie Dillard
"On 'The Company We Keep,'" by Robie Macauley
FICTION
"In the Garden of the Djinn," by Tony Ardizzone
"The History of Rodney," by Rick Bass
"The Pseudonym," by Paul Buttenwieser
"Spanish Winter," by Jennifer Egan
"The Wrecker," by Jeffrey Goodell
"A Wave of the Hand," by Judith Grossman
"Sleep Tight," by Alice Hoffman
"She's Not Dead, Belle," by Ward Just
"Dog Stories," by Barbara Nodine
"Snails," by George Packer
"Confusing the Dog," by Pamela Painter
"In a Father's Place," by Christopher Tilghman
"The Body Politic," by Theodore Weesner
Language
English
Pages
216
Format
Kindle Edition
Release
August 15, 1989
Ploughshares Fall 1989 Guest-Edited by James Carroll
The Fall 1989 issue of Ploughshares, guest edited by James Carroll. Ploughshares, a journal of new writing, is guest edited serially by prominent writers who explore different and personal visions, aesthetics, and literary circles.
Acclaimed novelist and nonfiction writer James Carroll compiles this volume of stories and essays subtitled "The Virtue of Writing." This edition of Ploughshares is devoted to the morality and ethics of fiction. As Carroll says in his introduction, "The ploughshare is the sharpened blade of the plow, the thing that cuts the furrow. But it is also, in our culture, a moral symbol. The founders of this magazine made a moral and political statement when they chose its name, and it is that aspect of the meaning of Ploughshares that this issue emphasizes. It is dedicated to the idea that writing, and in particular, the writing of fiction, is a morally serious enterprise; and more than that, that fiction inevitably involves us in a mode of thinking which is, at its core, thinking about morality." With fiction from Tony Ardizzone, Jennifer Egan, Alice Hoffman, Ward Just, George Packer, Pamela Painter, and Annie Dillard.
INTRODUCTION
James Carroll
ESSAYS
"Volcano," by Annie Dillard
"On 'The Company We Keep,'" by Robie Macauley
FICTION
"In the Garden of the Djinn," by Tony Ardizzone
"The History of Rodney," by Rick Bass
"The Pseudonym," by Paul Buttenwieser
"Spanish Winter," by Jennifer Egan
"The Wrecker," by Jeffrey Goodell
"A Wave of the Hand," by Judith Grossman
"Sleep Tight," by Alice Hoffman
"She's Not Dead, Belle," by Ward Just
"Dog Stories," by Barbara Nodine
"Snails," by George Packer
"Confusing the Dog," by Pamela Painter
"In a Father's Place," by Christopher Tilghman
"The Body Politic," by Theodore Weesner