Making the Translator Visible: Edward Gauvin
Edward Gauvin is simply awesome. I first met him when he was working at the French Publishers’ Agency. Actually, that’s not exactly accurate. I first corresponded with him when he was at the FPA, but I first met him in person when he was visiting Rochester. See? People do visit Rochester. Edward’s ...
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The Final Frontier: Translating Sci-Fi & Fantasy with Georges-Olivier Ch芒teaureynaud
On June 20, 2011 Small Beer Press was delighted to announce their winners for their inaugural Science Fiction & Fantasy Translation “Award.鈥:http://tinyurl.com/3wpflje This year鈥檚 long-form award went to celebrated short story writer Georges-Olivier Ch芒teaureynaud, author of the winning book A Life on Paper: ...
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A Life on Paper: Stories
In reading this marvelous selection of Georges-Olivier Ch芒teaureynaud鈥檚 short fiction, I could not help but reminisce about childhood nights spent huddled near a campfire, seated at the feet of an elder and listening, enraptured, to ghost stories. Like those master storytellers whose haunting tales were exaggerated by the ...
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Latest Review: "A Life on Paper: Stories" by Georges-Olivier Ch芒teaureynaud
The latest addition to our Reviews Section is a piece by Catherine Bailey on A Life on Paper: Stories by Georges-Olivier Ch芒teaureynaud, translated from the French by Edward Gauvin, and available from Small Beer Press. Catherine Bailey is an English grad student here at the URochester. (Or maybe was . . . I ...
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A Life on Paper [Why This Book Should Win the BTBA]
Similar to years past, we鈥檙e going to be featuring each of the 25 titles on the BTBA Fiction Longlist over the next month plus, but in contrast to previous editions, this year we鈥檙e going to try an experiment and frame all write-ups as 鈥渨hy this book should win.鈥 Some of these entries will be absurd, some more ...
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Quarterly Conversation: Issue 21
Running a bit behind with the news here, but the Fall 2010 issue of the Quarterly Conversation is now available online. As always, there’s a lot of great content here, including an essay on Nicholson Baker as the missing link between Updike and DFW, a piece on Helene Cixous’s So Close, and tons of interesting book ...
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