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[AYB]≫ Descargar Free Nightmare Alley New York Review Books Classics William Lindsay Gresham Nick Tosches Books

Nightmare Alley New York Review Books Classics William Lindsay Gresham Nick Tosches Books



Download As PDF : Nightmare Alley New York Review Books Classics William Lindsay Gresham Nick Tosches Books

Download PDF Nightmare Alley New York Review Books Classics William Lindsay Gresham Nick Tosches Books


Nightmare Alley New York Review Books Classics William Lindsay Gresham Nick Tosches Books

Set in the sleazy low-life world of travelling carnivals in the 1920's -- 1930's, William Lindsay Gresham's 1946 novel, "Nightmare Alley" tells the story of Stan Carlisle from his days as a carnival sleight-of-hand magician, to his rise as a mentalist and spiritualist, to his abject degradation. The book became a 1947 movie starring Tyronne Power. I was drawn to the book because I have been reading American noir and have a fascination with the novel's gritty carnival theme.

The book is replete with opacity and hokum. Each chapter begins with a Tarot Card, as befitting its theme, which is tied in with the development of the story. A popular, best-selling novel in its day, "Nightmare Alley" requires attention to read. The story develops slowly, carefully, and obscurely with substantial foreshadowing. The book becomes clearer by returning to the beginning after an initial reading.

The word "geek" has acquired a contemporary meaning, but in Gresham's novel the word denotes the lowest, most vulgar act in a carnival sideshow. As the book opens, Gresham portrays a "geek", "half man, half animal" as he crawls about on all fours in a dirty pen fondling snakes and killing and eating raw chickens. The most fascinating portions of the book are its portrayals of carnival life, with its "kooch shows", electric girls, tattooed sailors, magicians, midgets, and mind readers. The book's focus is on the "ten in one" show which offered a collage of frauds and freaks for a single price.

Stan Carlisle, the "Great Stanton" is the central character in the book. As it begins, Stan is an ambitious, unprincipled young magician rising in the carny world. The story is told by "misdirection", the heart of the sleight-of-hand worker, as Stan's early life unfolds only gradually and by hints. Stan romances an older carny woman, Zeena, who works as a mentalist answering questions from the audience or "marks" based on a complicated system of cues. An ambitious young man, Stan wants to learn the tricks, which he does in part by knocking off Zeena's alcoholic husband. Stan then teams up with a young girl named Molly, who began her carny life working in a girl show and who has moved up to the role of electric girl. She ostensibly is able to take electricity passed through her body in a replica of the Sing-Sing electric chair. Stan and Molly leave the carnival for bigger and better things and richer marks. For several years, the couple do their mentalism routine in vaudeville shows. They gradually move up to work in the realm of spiritualism, seances, and raising "spooks" which Gresham parodies mercilessly. The Great Stanton finds what proves to be the ultimate vicious femme fatale, a psychiatrist named Lillith Ritter who is more unscrupulous and intelligent than her mark, Stan. Together, they plot to deceive a wealthy manufacturer, Ezra Grindle, who has carried a lifelong guilt when his college sweetheart died from an abortion. Following a long climactic scene, the novels winds inexorably through the world of crime, killing, alcohol, hoboing to eventual geekdom.

Many shocking scenes in the novel take place in alleys, as befitting its title. In one scene, Stan runs through an alley following an encounter with a prostitute en route to a meeting with the psychiatrist, Lillith. The desperate, claustrophobic scene is emblematic of the book. Gresham writes:

"Stan felt the prickle crawl up over his scalp again. The old house was waiting for him and the fat ones with pince-nez and false teeth; this woman doc probably was one of them, for all the music of voice an cool, slow speech. What could she do for him? What could anybody do for him? For anybody? They were all trapped, all running down the alley toward the light."

"Nightmare Alley" is a raw, sordid, powerful book. It is full of details and people which enhance the seamy character of the tale. The primary characters, Stan and Molly, are well and cunningly developed and contrasted. For readers fascinated with such matters and willing to explore noir literature now somewhat off the beaten path, the book offers a sharp portrayal of the underside of American life. The book is available in the single volume I am reviewing here or in a Library of America volume of Crime Novels of American Noir from the 1930s and 40s.American Noir: 11 Classic Crime Novels of the 1930s, 40s, & 50s (Library of America) The book also reminded me of one of my favorites: a photographic history of Carnival girlie shows by the renowned photographer Susan Meiselas.CARNIVAL STRIPPERS. Readers interested in the world of the carny will love Gresham's book.

Robin Friedman

Read Nightmare Alley New York Review Books Classics William Lindsay Gresham Nick Tosches Books

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Nightmare Alley New York Review Books Classics William Lindsay Gresham Nick Tosches Books Reviews


I found this book very interesting - even though I cannot say it's enjoyable. Reading it was rather unpleasant, to put it mildly. Think Kafka's The Metamorphosis, with people depicted by Gresham being about as attractive as Kafka's insect. But yes, we have to admit, there are very unappetizing things in life, and Gresham is definitely able to describe them with great authenticity.

A number of things make this book interesting. First and foremost - it's the language. This book is written in American vernacular of the first half of XX century. Even though I was born much later, one can feel immediately it's the real thing, Gresham has keen ear and ability to put on paper the way people really talk. The book is full of colloquialisms, expressions used on the street by lowlife people, and people in a particular trade (most of the characters are in the show business, carnivals), as well as psychiatric terms (one of the characters is a psychiatrist). Words and expressions you won't find in print frequently, like gonif, ad-libbed (now they'd say winged), etc etc.

And it's not just the language the life itself is captured with lots of details, which makes this book very persuasive. It has a wide variety of characters, from "carny" crowd, vile psychiatrist, an industrialist, duped by "spiritualist" crooks, even one black communist, described, again, very vividly in one chapter. Everyone talks using their very own language policeman, morgue attendant (what a story!), lady psychiatrist...

The book describes in much detail how "mind readers" operate, from cheap town fair crooks "mitt readers" to high level "spiritualists", arranging fraudulent séances where people "meet" their deceased loved ones, cheating the victims of all their possessions.

Another side of the book which makes it worth reading is the chance to get a view of the - probably tortured - mind of the author himself. As we learn from the introduction, he was an alcoholic, also he was influenced by teachings of Sigmund Freud which were very much in vogue back then. There's a lot of sexuality in the book, if not very explicit - then at least very much suggested; the prose is dense with sexual longings, trauma and despair. Two main characters, Stan and Molly, both experienced exposure to sexual acts in their childhood, which Gresham describes as traumatic/defining event. Generally, in the nature/nurture dispute, Gresham is, clearly, very much on the nurture side. Life of his heroes is broken, author suggests, because of those childhood experiences. I wonder if Gresham himself suffered something similar as a child.

I'll repeat - this book is not pleasant, and I don't find it interesting philosophically, also the characters are rather one-dimensional. That's why I give it 4 stars. The story itself and the construction of this book is good, but main interest is in this being a history of society, language and the way of thinking of people in certain time and place. And this task is performed by the author with great mastery.

The introduction, written by Nick Tosches, is also very good and informative - if a bit too short. Gresham's life seems to be very interesting.
Ever want to study the con? Heres a nice book to show you how. The novel tracks the progress of stan as he grows from a young boy dreams of wealth to a con artist always on the hunt for the ultimate trick. Along the way, there are carny freaks and geeks and rich men with desperations of thejr own to sate.

Stan isnt the only trickster, he learns his con from a fortune teller, partners up with a naive young woman, but ultimately is fooled most of all. Recurring themes of freudian analysis, parental trauma, alcoholismand the recurring tarot decks. Stan is haunted by a nightmare, the titular alley. Its bleakness is entropic, and as the central image of the novel it truly encapsulates the atmosphere.

I picked up this book hoping to delve deeper into my study of noir literature, hoping to pick up a classic of the genre. I like carnivals and i like con artists, felt like this was a great match. It didn't dissapoint, at least not conceptually. The middle was a bit of a slog, but the ending comes back around ties the noose around the main characters neck with a surprising con.

Ultimately, i really liked the novel. Iwould have liked a bit more depth to my character, and perhaps more insight into Molly's state of mind at the end.
Set in the sleazy low-life world of travelling carnivals in the 1920's -- 1930's, William Lindsay Gresham's 1946 novel, "Nightmare Alley" tells the story of Stan Carlisle from his days as a carnival sleight-of-hand magician, to his rise as a mentalist and spiritualist, to his abject degradation. The book became a 1947 movie starring Tyronne Power. I was drawn to the book because I have been reading American noir and have a fascination with the novel's gritty carnival theme.

The book is replete with opacity and hokum. Each chapter begins with a Tarot Card, as befitting its theme, which is tied in with the development of the story. A popular, best-selling novel in its day, "Nightmare Alley" requires attention to read. The story develops slowly, carefully, and obscurely with substantial foreshadowing. The book becomes clearer by returning to the beginning after an initial reading.

The word "geek" has acquired a contemporary meaning, but in Gresham's novel the word denotes the lowest, most vulgar act in a carnival sideshow. As the book opens, Gresham portrays a "geek", "half man, half animal" as he crawls about on all fours in a dirty pen fondling snakes and killing and eating raw chickens. The most fascinating portions of the book are its portrayals of carnival life, with its "kooch shows", electric girls, tattooed sailors, magicians, midgets, and mind readers. The book's focus is on the "ten in one" show which offered a collage of frauds and freaks for a single price.

Stan Carlisle, the "Great Stanton" is the central character in the book. As it begins, Stan is an ambitious, unprincipled young magician rising in the carny world. The story is told by "misdirection", the heart of the sleight-of-hand worker, as Stan's early life unfolds only gradually and by hints. Stan romances an older carny woman, Zeena, who works as a mentalist answering questions from the audience or "marks" based on a complicated system of cues. An ambitious young man, Stan wants to learn the tricks, which he does in part by knocking off Zeena's alcoholic husband. Stan then teams up with a young girl named Molly, who began her carny life working in a girl show and who has moved up to the role of electric girl. She ostensibly is able to take electricity passed through her body in a replica of the Sing-Sing electric chair. Stan and Molly leave the carnival for bigger and better things and richer marks. For several years, the couple do their mentalism routine in vaudeville shows. They gradually move up to work in the realm of spiritualism, seances, and raising "spooks" which Gresham parodies mercilessly. The Great Stanton finds what proves to be the ultimate vicious femme fatale, a psychiatrist named Lillith Ritter who is more unscrupulous and intelligent than her mark, Stan. Together, they plot to deceive a wealthy manufacturer, Ezra Grindle, who has carried a lifelong guilt when his college sweetheart died from an abortion. Following a long climactic scene, the novels winds inexorably through the world of crime, killing, alcohol, hoboing to eventual geekdom.

Many shocking scenes in the novel take place in alleys, as befitting its title. In one scene, Stan runs through an alley following an encounter with a prostitute en route to a meeting with the psychiatrist, Lillith. The desperate, claustrophobic scene is emblematic of the book. Gresham writes

"Stan felt the prickle crawl up over his scalp again. The old house was waiting for him and the fat ones with pince-nez and false teeth; this woman doc probably was one of them, for all the music of voice an cool, slow speech. What could she do for him? What could anybody do for him? For anybody? They were all trapped, all running down the alley toward the light."

"Nightmare Alley" is a raw, sordid, powerful book. It is full of details and people which enhance the seamy character of the tale. The primary characters, Stan and Molly, are well and cunningly developed and contrasted. For readers fascinated with such matters and willing to explore noir literature now somewhat off the beaten path, the book offers a sharp portrayal of the underside of American life. The book is available in the single volume I am reviewing here or in a Library of America volume of Crime Novels of American Noir from the 1930s and 40s.American Noir 11 Classic Crime Novels of the 1930s, 40s, & 50s (Library of America) The book also reminded me of one of my favorites a photographic history of Carnival girlie shows by the renowned photographer Susan Meiselas.CARNIVAL STRIPPERS. Readers interested in the world of the carny will love Gresham's book.

Robin Friedman
Ebook PDF Nightmare Alley New York Review Books Classics William Lindsay Gresham Nick Tosches Books

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