A MANUAL FOR CLEANING WOMEN
One of the New York Times 100 Best Books of the 21st Century
The world just goes along. Nothing much matters, you know? I mean really matters. but then sometimes, just for a second, you get this grace, this belief that it does matter, a whole lot.
With an introduction from Lydia Davis
Lucia Berlin's stories in A Manual for Cleaning Women make for one of the most remarkable unsung collections in twentieth-century American fiction.
With extraordinary honesty and magnetism, Lucia Berlin invites us into her rich, itinerant life: the drink and the mess and the pain and the beauty and the moments of surprise and of grace, with a voice is witty, anarchic, compassionate, and completely unique.
LUCIA BERLIN
Lucia Berlin 1936-2004 worked brilliantly but sporadically throughout the 1960s, '70s and '80s. Her stories are culled from her early childhood in various Western mining towns; her glamorous teenage years in Santiago, Chile; three failed marriages; a lifelong problem with alcoholism; her years spent in Berkeley, New Mexico, and Mexico City; and the various jobs she later held to support her writing and her four sons, including as a high-school teacher, a switchboard operator, a physician's assistant, and a cleaning woman. She published several short story collections including Angels Laundromat and Homesick, and several of her previously published stories are collected together in New York Times Bestseller, A Manual For Cleaning Women.
Edad recomendada: Adultos.
BERLIN LUCIA
Lucia Berlin 1936-2004 publicó sus primeros relatos a los veinticuatro años en The Atlantic Monthly y en la revista de Saul Bellow y Keith Botsford, The Noble Savage. Toda su literatura se inspira en sus propios recuerdos: su infancia en distintas poblaciones mineras de Idaho, Kentucky y Montana, su glamurosa adolescencia en Santiago de Chile, sus estancias en El Paso, Nueva York, México o California, sus tres matrimonios fallidos, su alcoholismo o los distintos puestos de trabajo que desempeñó para poder mantener a sus cuatro hijos: enfermera, telefonista, limpiadora, profesora de escritura en distintas universidades y en una cárcel. Publicó seis libros de cuentos y en 1991 recibió el American Book Award por Homesick: New and Selected Stories.