Knopf, 132 pp., $20.00
OTHER BOOKS DISCUSSED IN THIS ARTICLE
North Point, 157 pp. (out of print)
Vintage, 308 pp., $14.00 (paper)
Vintage, 387 pp., $15.00 (paper)
North Point, 191 pp., $13.00 (paper)
North Point, 218 pp., $13.00 (paper)
Vintage, 233 pp., $13.00 (paper)
Shoemaker and Hoard, 150 pp., $24.00
Born in 1925 in Passaic, New Jersey, a graduate of West Point, and a fighter pilot in the Korean War, James Salter is the author of a relatively small body of prose of uncommon subtlety, intelligence, and beauty. Especially in his deftly rendered shorter fiction, gathered in Dusk and Other Stories (1988) and now Last Night, as in the remarkable Light Years (1975), Salter suggests not the heavy hitters of his era—James Jones, Irwin Shaw, Robert Penn Warren, John O'Hara, Norman Mailer, William Styron, and Saul Bellow, for whom prose fiction is an arena for sinewy self-display and argumentation—but such European sensibilities as Proust, Colette, Woolf, Nabokov, Marguerite Duras.
Review, 4026 words
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