Description
Early Stories by Tennessee Williams is an edited collection of thirty-one previously unpublished short stories written in the 1930s, when Tennessee Williams was living in the Midwest during a tumultuous period for the nation and himself. The stories highlight aspects of the writer’s biography relative to his young adult years in St. Louis, Columbia, and the Missouri Ozarks, offering insight into the relationships between the author, his family, and close friends. The influence of proletarian fiction and leftist ideas are evident in Williams’s stories of the Great Depression, as are themes of sexual turmoil and inner passions inspired by authors like D. H. Lawrence.
In notes for each story, additional context is provided regarding locations, occupations, and individuals. All of this enriches a critical understanding of Tennessee Williams’s major works such as The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Night of the Iguana, and Suddenly Last Summer.
Binding Type: Paperback
Contributors: Tennessee Williams, Tom Mitchell (Editor), Thomas Keith (Contribution by)
Published: 04/15/2025
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
ISBN: 9781685970048
Pages: 328
Weight: 1.05lbs
Size: 1.02″ H x 8.98″ L x 5.98″ W
About the Author
Tennessee Williams (1911-1983) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and author, born in Mississippi and raised in St. Louis, Missouri. Noted as one of the greatest playwrights of the twentieth century, Williams’s plays continue to be produced around the world. Tom Mitchell is emeritus professor of theatre at the University of Illinois and scholar-in-residence for the Tennessee Williams Festival St. Louis. Among other work, he edited The Caterpillar Dogs and Other Early Stories by Tennessee Williams. Mitchell lives in Champaign, Illinois. Thomas Keith has edited the Tennessee Williams titles for New Directions Publishing since 2002, is coeditor of The Luck of Friendship: Letters of Tennessee Williams and James Laughlin, edited Love, Christopher Street, and wrote Robert Burns’s Life on the Stage. He is an associate adjunct professor of theater at Pace University.




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