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Little Kingdoms
 
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Little Kingdoms (Paperback)

by Steven Millhauser (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Overlappings of imagination and reality cast magic through these three vividly conceived novellas exploring the ramifications of artistic creation. In "The Little Kingdom of J. Franklin Payne," the eponymous hero, a cartoonist for a New York City newspaper in the 1920s, labors in the study of his Mount Hebron home on a "secret, exhilarating project": thousands of numbered ink drawings that will constitute moments of an elaborate animated film. As the world of his art becomes more splendid, the day-to-day reality of his life becomes progressively less rewarding. "The Princess, the Dwarf, and the Dungeon" juggles familiar motifs of legend--a beautiful, virtuous princess; a jealous prince; a scheming dwarf; a towering castle and subterranean dungeon--in its tale of a town's self-conscious effort to attach a fanciful, folkloric past to its utilitarian present. "Catalogue of the Exhibition" fashions a biography of fictional 19th-century painter Edmund Moorash and his intimates from a sequential discussion of his exhibited works. Millhauser ( The Barnum Museum ) evokes the impact of non-verbal art with uncommon ease. He develops each of these stories with such narrative precision and well-chosen detail that even his most fanciful and abstract conceits fully engage the reader.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Kirkus Reviews

These three ingenious novellas confirm Millhauser's status as a master fabulist--an author who displays a fantastic ability to describe in detail objects of his own invention: puppets, circuses, board games, and miniatures. Here, his greatest inventions are the comic strips and animated cartoons of J. Franklin Payne--in a portrait of an artist whose work recalls the career of Winsor McCay. Like McCay, Payne raises the level of popular ephemeral to high art. And Millhauser so effectively creates Payne's inner ``kingdom'' that we begin to see reality refracted through the artist's peculiar imagination. In the 20's, Payne begins as a midwestern comic-strip artist whose first series on a dime museum earns him a place on a major New York daily, where he contributes editorial cartoons as well. With his wife--a high-brow who never really accepts his art--and daughter, Payne sets up house north of the city, where he spends hours in his studio creating his first animated cartoons. His meticulous craftsmanship results in commercial success, but also the opprobrium of his employer. As Payne begins his masterpiece, he retreats further into his world of artifice, so that by close, reality and fantasy collapse. The ``The Princess, the Dwarf, and the Dungeon'' concerns an actual kingdom, though one that exists in no discernible time or place. It's a cubist re-creation of a Prince's ``moral fall'' after he gratuitously tests his wife's faithfulness. Full of desire and duplicity, the tale unfolds rather dryly, with a description of possible endings, all of which emphasize a sense of justice and concord. Last, a faux art catalog uses the descriptions of 26 paintings by Edmund Moorash to draw a portrait of a strange genius. In the early 19th-century, Moorash's dark visionary landscapes and portraits fail to equal the bizarre demise of the artist, his sister, and their best friends. There's nothing overly academic about Millhauser's fictional inventions--for every bit of cleverness, there's the art of true passion. -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Picturesque Tales, Sep 23 2002
By schapmock (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
The first of the three novellas that comprise this book, The Little Kingdom of J. Franklin Payne, is by itself worth the price of admission. Unusually direct for Millhauser, the story of an obsessed cartoonist in turn of the century New York engages the emotions as well as the intellect, creating a quietly heartbreaking family portrait while vividly depicting the joys and agonies of iconoclastic creativity.

The Princess, the Dwarf, and the Dungeon is a yet another post-modern fairy tale, but after a slow start becomes quite intriguing, let down only by an overly facile conclusion.

Catalogue of the Exhibition is a brilliant idea -- the story of an artist and his circle told in the catalogue for an exhibition of his work -- and seems perfect for Millhauser, whose love for (and skill at) describing invented painting and drawing seemingly knows no bounds, yet this novella disappoints. The "Catalogue" idea seems tacked on as the entries grow to fill pages barely about the painting at hand, and the story never quite punches through the conceit. But we do get some wonderfully spooky descriptions of Lovecraftian canvases.

Millhauser's certainly an acquired taste and not for everyone, but if you've enjoyed any of his other work this collection, particularly its fine first tale, will likely please.

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5.0 out of 5 stars The Readers of Steven Millhauser, Jun 7 2001
By A Customer
Readers of the mysterious work of Steven Millhauser are sometimes themselves a mystery. Look, for example, at some readers' extremely negative reactions to his prize-winning "Martin Dressler." What accounts for this? Perhaps this is a class of readers who trail the Pulitzer Prize committees and choose their books based only on who wins. How odd and superficial. Again and again, such know-nothings find their narrowly traditional notions of what a novel is betrayed by Millhauser. Mr. Millhauser, keep it up!
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3.0 out of 5 stars enchanting fairy tale-like novellas with a dark side, Jan 15 2001
By A Customer
This is a different pace than his other books b-c it's broken down into quick-read novellas. You sink into an almost childlike world of characters whose consuming faith in one thing allows them to create their own imaginary realities. There are so many little kingdoms within each story, and it evokes a feeling of wonder. I only gave it a 3 b-c I liked some of his other books better, but this book was really interesting, deceptively simple. Also, I disagree with the first reviewer who said the last story was a bore. It was a different pace, but I could really visualize each painting he described. It encourages the reader to use his or her own imagination
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3.0 out of 5 stars Starts great but then...
The first two novellas of this book are worth readingm but the Moorhouse collectrion descripition was, perhaps, one of the borest things I ever read. Read more
Published on Jan 18 1999

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