Plain Pleasures: Stories
A restored collection of the short fiction of an overlooked genius whose visionary style and modernist experiments with form we’re only just beginning to understand.

This stunning collection of Jane Bowles’s short fiction shows us the work of a little-understood, visionary genius. In these uncanny and insidious tales, Bowles presents us with an incendiary and groundbreaking vision of the mad possibilities of literary modernism. And for the first time ever, we’ve included the excised sections of Two Serious Ladies (which was originally Three Serious Ladies) that add even more mystery, intrigue, and allure to this most compelling and most elusive figure of twentieth-century letters.

From “Everything Is Nice,” where an American woman is led to a house in a “blue Moslem town” by a veiled woman with porcupines in her basket, to “Camp Cataract,” a Colorado-based tour de force of middle-class claustrophobia and dread, these stories are a bewildering, headlong plunge into the jagged, seething, fever-dream world of Jane Bowles.

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Plain Pleasures: Stories
A restored collection of the short fiction of an overlooked genius whose visionary style and modernist experiments with form we’re only just beginning to understand.

This stunning collection of Jane Bowles’s short fiction shows us the work of a little-understood, visionary genius. In these uncanny and insidious tales, Bowles presents us with an incendiary and groundbreaking vision of the mad possibilities of literary modernism. And for the first time ever, we’ve included the excised sections of Two Serious Ladies (which was originally Three Serious Ladies) that add even more mystery, intrigue, and allure to this most compelling and most elusive figure of twentieth-century letters.

From “Everything Is Nice,” where an American woman is led to a house in a “blue Moslem town” by a veiled woman with porcupines in her basket, to “Camp Cataract,” a Colorado-based tour de force of middle-class claustrophobia and dread, these stories are a bewildering, headlong plunge into the jagged, seething, fever-dream world of Jane Bowles.

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Plain Pleasures: Stories

Plain Pleasures: Stories

by Jane Bowles
Plain Pleasures: Stories

Plain Pleasures: Stories

by Jane Bowles

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Overview

A restored collection of the short fiction of an overlooked genius whose visionary style and modernist experiments with form we’re only just beginning to understand.

This stunning collection of Jane Bowles’s short fiction shows us the work of a little-understood, visionary genius. In these uncanny and insidious tales, Bowles presents us with an incendiary and groundbreaking vision of the mad possibilities of literary modernism. And for the first time ever, we’ve included the excised sections of Two Serious Ladies (which was originally Three Serious Ladies) that add even more mystery, intrigue, and allure to this most compelling and most elusive figure of twentieth-century letters.

From “Everything Is Nice,” where an American woman is led to a house in a “blue Moslem town” by a veiled woman with porcupines in her basket, to “Camp Cataract,” a Colorado-based tour de force of middle-class claustrophobia and dread, these stories are a bewildering, headlong plunge into the jagged, seething, fever-dream world of Jane Bowles.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781250376589
Publisher: Picador
Publication date: 08/26/2025
Pages: 112
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 7.50(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Jane Bowles wrote only one novel, a play, and just over a dozen short stories. But these were enough to establish her reputation as one of the twentieth century’s most original fiction writers. Born in New York City in 1917, she later married the author Paul Bowles. At the age of forty, she suffered a debilitating stroke, which brought an early end to her writing. She died in 1973.
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