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Amado Muro

The Collected Stories

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Like the cavalry thundering to the rescue, a small press has once more published a major writer ignored by its larger counterparts. Thorp Springs Press of Austin, Texas, has collected the published fiction of Amado Muro, called by John Womack, Jr., “the funniest, brightest, most moving, accom­plished and prolific ‘Mexican-American’ . . . a veritable Isaac Babel of the Southwest.” It is as fine a collection of short fiction as has been pub­lished in recent years. Muro, who died in 1971, has become a minor cult figure in the South­ west. He wrote almost exclusively about men on the bum, following crops along an axis extending from Texas west on a gradually curving line into California’s Great Central Valley, or about Mexicans and Mexican Americans on both sides of the border. Although it was as a Chicano spokesman that Muro first attracted wide-spread attention, most critics have agreed that his tales and vignettes of bindle stiffs are stronger than his stories on Chicanos; indeed, they may be the best ever written on the subject. For example, he published a series of what he called “monologues” — Muro constantly tested the limits of the short story in his work — drawn from his own personal experience on the rails and in hobo camps. Some samples: Anglo Man (Bakersfield) In the Sacramento Labor Office they asked if anyone wanted to milk rattlesnakes. One stiff asked if rattlesnakes had udders like cows. The boss man shook his head and said “You won’t do.” Anglo Man (Delano) In Stockton, I got a cup of coffee in a cafe just off the Center Street skid row. When I finished drinking it, a middle-aged waitress with marcelled hair asked if I wanted anything more. She was fat with one tooth out and she walked on the sides of her feet like a tame bear. I said, “No ma’am, that was my last dime.” I got up to go then, but she said, “Wait young man,” and brought me doughnuts and more coffee. When I thanked her, she said, “That’s all right, young man. I know how it is to be broke.” By contrast, Muro’s Mexican stories seem a bit less tight, perhaps a tad romantic, although they too are strongly-wrought. He catches the style of squalling women on a Chihuahua slum street in “Mala Torres”: “Some said they wished they had gone into a convent instead of getting married. Others disagreed. ‘Ay Madre, it’s better to undress one-horned drunkards than dress plaster saints,’ they insisted.” In another story, “Maria Tepache,” an old lady says to a drifter: “Hijole, paisanito, what spider has stung you — you look sad and burdened like the woodcutter’s burro. . . . Well, I don’t blame you. When bread becomes scarce so do smiles.” In both cases, he avoids clichés, presenting his subjects frankly and humanely. One never senses him belittling even his most humble character, and for good reason. He lived their lives, riding the rails and picking crops all over the west, dwelling at other times in small Mexican villages. All this showed in his work and, just prior to his death, Edward Simmen had observed that Muro “seems to have written more good short fiction than any other young Mexican-American.” His stories were appearing with increasing frequency in anthologies and a couple of articles in scholarly journals had examined his work. Only after his death was it discovered that he had been neither young nor Chicano. Amado Jesus Muro was the nom de plume of Chester Seltzer, a middle-aged Anglo journalist who had been publishing under a masculine version of his wife’s maiden name (Amada Muro) since 1955, long before any advantage from a Spanish name accrued to a writer. There was more: he was the grandson of Charles Alden Seltzer, one of the fathers of the shoot-em-up western, the son of Louis B. Seltzer, editor of the Cleveland Press.  

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Images: All of actual item listed

Signed: No

Format: Hardcover

Publisher: St Martins

Edition: First

Printing: First

Full Number Line: 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Book Condition: Very Good Plus

Cover: Clean

Dust Jacket: Clean and Bright  

Binding: Straight intact 

Inside Condition: clean, no writing, torn or missing pages

Text Edge: clean 

List Price: unclipped $24.95

Remainder mark: No

Ex-Library: No

Book Club Edition: No

Mylar Cover: No

Please look at all the pictures as they are part of the description/condition of the book.

For explanation of condition terms used, see below

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Please be aware, if your package comes back unclaimed, undelivereable or any other reason not due to my control, I will gladly refund your purchase price less shipping costs already expended to ship the item to the address you provided or will re-ship the item to you with a confirmed address and shipping costs to again ship you the item.     Please, do not purchase this item if this is not acceptable!

The books offered here are obtained from various sources and I cannot ensure that they come from smoke and pet free environments. I select only the finest quality examples available and in many cases with the extremely rare they may be less than perfect but will include in depth descriptions of condition. All dust jackets, if possible, are sanitized with lab grade Isopropyl Alcohol for your protection.

All books are tissue wrapped and shipped in cardboard book mailer (if they fit) or Heavy Duty bubble wrap envelopes with additional padding for secure shipping.

All books $24.99 and over include a Mylar Protective Jacket

All books rated on Ebay book rating scale below!

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What is a True First Edition?

Rather than adopting the "Collectors" method of describing a book, I use the publishers terms for them to provide a more accurate description.

So, that said, while many books state "First Edition", this term can be confusing. A First Edition can have many printings but only the First Printing is the True First Edition. Publishers all use slightly different methods but most use a number line to define which printing, state "First Published in" with no line number or will state "First Edition" and list no line number. With only one exception the line numbers will all include a "1" for the True First Printing hence a True First Edition. Random House and it's subsidiaries use a line starting in "2" (recently they started using a "1" like other publishers) and state plainly "First Edition" if it is a first printing and eliminate the "First Edition" once they start the second printing.

Many editions state First Edition, as they are until a reprint is done, but this is not the same as what collectors call a "True First Edition". A books value is in the printing and the First Printing is the most valuable and is referred to as the "True First Edition".

An original Book Club issue released at the time the original First Edition is released will be described as a First Edition Book Club and later issues by book clubs will not include the First Edition designation.

In my listings all True First Editions will state "First Printing" and if only stating First Edition it will indicate a later printing or re-issue in the description.

<> <> <> The statement of a dust jacket "A Book Of The Month Club Main Selection" DOES NOT mean it is a book club edition! It means that the book was selected to be a Book Club of The Month Main Selection as it says, in addition to the First Editions! <> <> <>

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EBay Book Condition Definitions

Terminology

FEP: Front End Paper

ISBN: International Standard Book Number

Crinkling: the curling of dust jacket edges over time

Chipping: Little tears along edges of dust jacket

Clipped/Unclipped: The MSRP has or hasn't been clipped off

Remainder: The mark a publisher makes when the item is ineligable for credit back from the publisher

Foxing: Spotting on a book, usually brown spots found in varying severity, caused by a chemical action wherein impurities in the paper oxidize

Brand New

A new, unread, unused book in perfect condition with no missing or damaged pages. See the seller's listing for full details.

Like New

A book that looks new but has been read. Cover has no visible wear, and the dust jacket (if applicable) is included for hard covers. No missing or damaged pages, no creases or tears, and no underlining/highlighting of text or writing in the margins. May have very minimal identifying marks on the inside cover. Very minimal wear and tear. See the seller?s listing for full details and description of any imperfections.

Very Good

A book that does not look new and has been read but is in excellent condition. No obvious damage to the cover, with the dust jacket (if applicable) included for hard covers. No missing or damaged pages, no creases or tears, and no underlining/highlighting of text or writing in the margins. May have very minimal identifying marks on the inside cover. Very minimal wear and tear. See the seller?s listing for full details and description of any imperfections.

Good

A book that has been read but is in good condition. Very minimal damage to the cover including scuff marks, but no holes or tears. The dust jacket for hard covers may not be included. Binding has minimal wear. The majority of pages are undamaged with minimal creasing or tearing, minimal pencil underlining of text, no highlighting of text, no writing in margins. No missing pages. See the seller?s listing for full details and description of any imperfections.

Acceptable

A book with obvious wear. May have some damage to the cover but integrity still intact. The binding may be slightly damaged but integrity is still intact. Possible writing in margins, possible underlining and highlighting of text, but no missing pages or anything that would compromise the legibility or understanding of the text. See the seller?s listing for full details and description of any imperfections.

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All books are rated based on these conditions



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