<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Expanded 30th-anniversary edition of Patricia Eakins's critically acclaimed collection of short stories, "a modern bestiary which reworks the stuff of mythologies, spanning the cultures of the planet."<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Expanded 30th-anniversary edition of Patricia Eakins's critically acclaimed collection of short stories, "a modern bestiary which reworks the stuff of mythologies, spanning the cultures of the planet."</p><p>In addition to the 13 short fictions collected in the original 1989 edition of this book, this new edition includes the story "Black Food," never before published in the United States.</p><p>This edition also includes the transcript of Françoise Palleau-Papin's 1998 interview with the author, "A Conversation with Patricia Eakins," as well as "Here Be Dragons," John Richards's new interview with Jeffrey Miller of Cadmus Editions, the original publisher of <em>The Hungry Girls</em>. Additionally, there are two short pieces about the 1997 Collision Theory theatrical production of <em>The Hungry Girls: A Fairy Tale</em> from Stephanie Gilman (co-producer and director) and Kristin Tanzer (co-producer and choreographer), and a piece from artist Moira Bateman about her Hungry Girls nightdresses, mixed media fiber sculptures inspired by Eakins's story.</p><p>The cover features the brilliant work of renowned artist Brenda Goodman ("Self Portrait 13," 48x40, oil on wood, 1994).</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>"Patricia Eakins's territory is in that tangled thicket of the imagination somewhere between Borges and Burroughs, between the fairy tales of Grimm and the magic realism of the South Americans, a kind of <em>Invisible Cities</em> as animal sanctuary ... It is a work of imaginative brilliance, a considerable achievement in modest disguise. ... Readers interested in the pleasure of surprising fictions will go out of their way to find Patricia Eakins's triumphantly quirky first book."<br /> -- Jonathan Baumbach, <em>The New York Times Book Review</em></p><p>"<em>The Hungry Girls</em> is a continuously startling work, an elegant violation of the rules of contemporary fiction."<br /> -- Elizabeth Herron</p><p>"A stunning mixture of mythology, surrealism, anthropology and nature, the thirteen stories in this collection are a tour-de-force of originality, imagination and style. ... <em>The Hungry Girls</em> is quite simply one of the most intriguing and entertaining new collections of short fiction I have read in recent years."<br /> -- Greg Boyd, <em>Asylum</em></p><p>"These stories are more than imagination; they are witty, playful, soberly detailed glimpses into realities totally believable."<br /> -- Faye Kicknosway</p><p>"Patricia Eakins's <em>The Hungry Girls</em> is as rare a creature as those that populate its pages, a genuinely original, beautiful, and disturbing work of art. It is a kind of imaginative bestiary for our times, but a bestiary in the same sense that Borges's <em>Ficciones</em> is a collection of myths or that Calvino's <em>Cosmicomics</em> is a scientific treatise. And it shares with these works a lightness of touch, comic wit, and astonishing inventiveness."<br /> -- Robert Coover</p><br>
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