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Rainbow Warehouse

Rainbow Warehouse

Rainbow Warehouse
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Rainbow Warehouse

by Knight, Ann, and Kinsella, W. P

  • Used
  • Paperback
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Good.
ISBN 10
0919001556
ISBN 13
9780919001558
Seller
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Silver Spring, Maryland, United States
Item Price
£59.32
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About This Item

Lawrencetown Beach, Nova Scotia, Canada: Pottersfield Press, 1989. Presumed first edition/first printing. Trade paperback. Good.. Harwood, Lee (Cover artwork). 79, [1] pages. Signed by Bill Kinsella. Biographical Notes. Signed by author. From Wikipedia: "William Patrick Kinsella, OC, OBC (born May 25, 1935) is a Canadian novelist and short story writer who is well known for his novel Shoeless Joe (1982), which was adapted into the movie Field of Dreams in 1989. His work has often concerned baseball, First Nations people, and other Canadian issues....According to the Canadian Encyclopedia, W.P. Kinsella's literary output primarily consists of two cycles of work dealing with two fictive universes: those dealing with baseball and those depicting the indigenous people of Canada. Kinsella's first published book was called Dance Me Outside (1977), which was a collection of seventeen short stories about the lives of people on a First Nations reserve in his native Alberta. [4] Kinsella was criticized for writing from the point-of-view of Native people, appropriating their voice. Kinsella rejected the criticism on the grounds that a writer has the license to create anything they so chose. These stories use the ineptness of the white bureaucrats on reservations as background, and Kinsella defended them, saying, "It's the oppressed and the oppressor that I write about. The way that oppressed people survive is by making fun of the people who oppress them. That is essentially what my Indian stories are all about." In the field of baseball, Kinsella has written nearly 40 short stories and three novels. Shoeless Joe (1982), his first novel, blends fantasy and magical realism to tell the story of a poor Iowa farmer who, yielding to voices in his head, builds a baseball field in his corn field that attracts the spirits of the 1919 Chicago White Sox. The Iowa Baseball Confederacy (1986), another book blending fantasy and magical realism, recounts an epic baseball game a minor league team played against the 1908 World's Champion Chicago Cubs. Box Socials (1991), an evocation of life in rural Alberta during the Great Depression and World War II, features a growing boy as its protagonist and the adventure of a hometown baseball hero who gets to bat against the great pitcher legend Bob Feller. Shoeless Joe remains Kinsella's most famous work. The book was mildly controversial in that it used a living person, the reclusive author J.D. Salinger, as one of its main characters. Kinsella, who had never met him, created a wholly imagined character (aside from his being a recluse) based on the author of The Catcher in the Rye, a book that had great meaning to him when he was a young man. To get a feel for Salinger, he re-read his body of work. "I made sure to make him a nice character so that he couldn t sue me." In an example of metafiction, he named his protagonist in Shoeless Joe "Ray Kinsella", a character from Salinger s uncollected story A Young Girl in 1941 with No Waist at All. Salinger had also used the surname shared by writer and protagonist in The Catcher in the Rye (Holden Caulfield's friend Richard Kinsella). Known for his litigiousness, Salinger contacted Kinsella's publisher via his attorneys to express outrage over having been portrayed in Shoeless Joe. Kinsella denied that Salinger, as a writer, had any real influence on his own writing, despite rumors to the contrary. (Some rumors held that Kinsella had actually met Salinger in person. ) Shoeless Joe won Kinsella the prestigious Houghton Mifflin Literary Fellowship and the Books in Canada First Novel Award in 1982. The book garnered good reviews, sold very well, and was made into a popular movie. Ann Knight met Kinsella ina writing class in Iowa in 1976 and they were married in 1978. This is her third book, and first one of poetry.

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Details

Bookseller
Ground Zero Books US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
67116
Title
Rainbow Warehouse
Author
Knight, Ann, and Kinsella, W. P
Illustrator
Harwood, Lee (Cover artwork)
Format/Binding
Trade paperback
Book Condition
Used - Good.
Quantity Available
1
Edition
Presumed first edition/first printing
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 10
0919001556
ISBN 13
9780919001558
Publisher
Pottersfield Press
Place of Publication
Lawrencetown Beach, Nova Scotia, Canada
Date Published
1989
Keywords
Verse, Scars, Drive-In, Oleta, Brambles, November 22, 1963, East Hastings, Paranois, Clove Smugglers

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About the Seller

Ground Zero Books

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2005
Silver Spring, Maryland

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Trade Paperback
Used to indicate any paperback book that is larger than a mass-market paperback and is often more similar in size to a hardcover...
Poor
A book with significant wear and faults. A poor condition book is still a reading copy with the full text still readable. Any...

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