Last Tales

Last Tales
Author Karen Blixen
Country Denmark
Language English
Publisher Random House, New York; G. P. Putnam's Sons, London; Gyldendal, Copenhagen
Publication date
1957
Media type Print
Pages 341pp
ISBN 978-0-140-09617-0
OCLC 15085200

Last Tales (translated by the author into Danish as Sidste fortællinger) is a collection of short stories by the Danish author Karen Blixen (under the pen name Isak Dinesen), which was published in 1957. The collection contains a group of stories taken from several other collections Blixen had been simultaneously working on for several years.

Background

Last Tales was written over a period of some years beginning in the 1930s.[1] Simultaneously, Blixen was working on a novel, Albondocani, which would remain unpublished, and three other story collections Anecdotes of Destiny, New Gothic Tales and New Winter’s Tales. She moved between the various collections, never completing any of them in their entirety. In 1957, she took seven stories from Albondocani[2] and combined them with two stories from New Gothic Tales and three stories from New Winter’s Tales for publication.[1] As she was compiling the stories in 1953, Blixen originally planned for Anecdotes of Destiny to be a final part of the Last Tales collection, but as she neared publication, she decided to release Anecdotes as a separate volume, published the following year.[3] The collection did not receive the acclaim her other works had generated and was not selected for the Book of the Month Club. Some reviewers noted individual tales as meritorious, such as "The Cardinal's First Tale", "Copenhagen Season", "A Country Tale", and "Echoes", but overall critical response was not overly enthusiastic.[1] Time Magazine′s review described the collection as a group of Gothic fiction, which combined a mixture of grotesque and sublime themes in which the romantic plot is obscured by the supernatural and "tragically turns on the concept of honor".[4]

Contents

Tales from Albondocani

Though the Tales of Albondocani are linked by recurring characters and a unifying theme, they lack a central figure, which she had described but never developed.[1] She had indicated that her intent was to create a cycle of over 100 tales, reminiscent of One Thousand and One Nights, each complete within itself but woven into the others. [5] Only the seven stories included in Last Tales and "Second Meeting" (1961) were published.[6]

New Gothic Tales

New Winter's Tales

References

Sources

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