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Stories
of Youth by James Lord
From the Introduction: "These two stories about
youths and youth were written more than half a century ago, when I was
twenty-six years old, almost at the end of an overly prolonged and troubled
adolescence. The undue length of this adolescence may have been caused
in part by traumatic experiences encountered as a soldier during World
War II, in which my role, though largely peripheral, was nonetheless personal
enough to inflict psychic shocks that distress me still today. The grim,
sadistic subject matter of both stories may, perhaps, be construed as
a delayed reaction to those shocks. All the other writing that I did throughout
this early period, none of which I wish to preserve, is more or less similar
in content and feeling.
"George Sickes, The Boy Who Wrote NO, makes his
aggressive and irreverent declarations of dissent specifically against
business, banking, conventional social manners, the law, the family, and,
most offensive of all, against religion. His punishment is the worst society
in its self-righteous outrage can impose: death in life. The young boy,
Dan, introduced in The Lizard, takes a decisive step toward manhood and
independence through his experience of the symbolic unity between death
and sexuality, cruelty and purity, blindness and discernment.
"Although I began to write in childhood and have
spent my life at it since leaving the army, these stories were my first
writings to be published. The Lizard appeared in Points, a literary review
edited in Paris by Sindbad Vail (summer issue, 1949); The Boy Who Wrote
NO in Horizon, a literary review edited in London by Cyril Connolly (Nos.
120-121, December 1949-January 1950, a double issue and the final one),
reprinted in The Golden Horizon, a volume published in London in 1953
by Weidenfeld and Nicholson, containing Connolly's selection of works
that had appeared in his review which he deemed worth preserving in book
form."
James Lord is widely known for his several volumes of
memoirs, as well as his definitive biography of the artist Albert Giacometti.
Stories of Youth is limited to 200 signed and numbered copies bound in
handmade paper boards with a linen spine (ISBN # 1-893450-11-2). $50.
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