Complete Stories

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Authors: Dorothy Parker,Colleen Bresse,Regina Barreca

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Table of Contents
 
 
 
 
 
 
PENGUIN TWENTIETH-CENTURY CLASSICS
 
COMPLETE STORIES
 
Dorothy Parker was born to J. Henry and Elizabeth Rothschild on August 22, 1893. Parker’s childhood was not a happy one. Her mother died young, and Dorothy did not enjoy a good relationship with her father and stepmother. She began her education at a Catholic convent school in Manhattan before being sent away to Miss Dana’s School in Morristown, New Jersey. In 1916, Frank Crowninshield gave Parker an editorial position at
Vogue
, following its publication of a number of her poems. The following year she moved on to write for
Vanity Fair
, where she would later become the theater critic. That same year she met and married Edwin Pond Parker II, whom she divorced a few years later. It was at
Vanity Fair
that Parker met her associates with whom she would form the Algonquin Round Table, the famed New York literary circle. In 1925, Parker also began writing short stories for a new magazine called
The New Yorker
. Her relationship with that publication would last, off and on, until 1957. Parker went abroad in the 1930s, continuing to write poetry and stories. In Europe she met Alan Camp-bell, whom she married in 1933. The couple divorced in 1947 but remarried in 1950, remaining together until Campbell’s death in 1963. Throughout this period in her life, Parker continued to publish collections of her work, including
Enough Rope
(1926),
Sunset Gun
(1928),
Laments for the Living
(1930), and
Death and Taxes
(1931). Her last great work was a play,
The Ladies of the Corridor
, which she wrote with Arnaud d’Usseau, published in 1954. Parker died on June 7, 1967.
 
Colleen Breese teaches in the English Department at the University of Toledo and is the author of
Excuse My Dust: The Art of Dorothy Parker’s Serious Fiction
. She resides with her family in Sylvania, Ohio.
 
Regina Barreca, a professor of English and feminist theory at the University of Connecticut, is the author of
Sweet Revenge: The Wicked Delights of Getting Even
,
Untamed and Unabashed: Essays on Women and Humor in Literature
,
Perfect Husbands (and other Fairy Tales)
, and
They Used to Call Me Snow White
,
but I Drifted
. She lives with her husband in Storrs, Connecticut.
 
PENGUIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Books USA Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.
Penguin Books Ltd, 27 Wrights Lane, London W8 5TZ, England
Penguin Books Australia Ltd, Ringwood, Victoria, Australia
Penguin Books Canada Ltd, 10 Alcorn Avenue,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4V 3B2
Penguin Books (N.Z.) Ltd, 182-190 Wairau Road,
Auckland 10, New Zealand
 
Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices:
Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England
 
First published in Penguin Books 1995
 
Copyright © The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 1924,
1925, 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934, 1937, 1938, 1939,
1941, 1943, 1955, 1958, 1995
Introduction copyright © Regina Barreca, 1995
All rights reserved
 
“The Custard Heart” was originally published in Dorothy Parker’s
Here Lies
, The Viking Press, 1939. The other selections first appeared in the following periodicals:
American Mercury
,
The Bookman
,
Cosmopolitan
,
Esquire
,
Harper’s Bazaar
,
Ladies’ Home Journal
,
The New Republic
,
The New Yorker
,
Pictorial Review
,
Scribner’s
,
Smart Set
,
Vanity Fair
, and
Woman’s Home Companion
.
 
“The Banquet of Crow” is
“As the Spirit Moves,”
“An Apartment House Anthology,” “Men I’m Not Married To,” “Welcome Home,” “Our Own
Crowd,” and “Professional Youth” are
 
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA
Parker, Dorothy, 1893-1967.
[Short stories]
Complete stories / Dorothy Parker ; edited by Colleen Breese ; with
an introduction by Regina Barreca.
p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-101-14403-9
1. United States—Social life and customs—20th century—Fiction.
I. Breese, Colleen. II. Title.
PS3531.A5855A6 1995
813’.52—dc20 95-15524
 
 

http://us.penguingroup.com

INTRODUCTION
 
Why is it that many critics seem so intent on defusing the power of Dorothy Parker’s writing that she appears more like a terrorist bomb than what she really is: one, solitary, unarmed American writer of great significance? Is it because so many of her critics—one might hesitate to underscore the obvious: so many of her
male
critics—seem to resent, half-consciously, her unwillingness to appease their literary appetites? Is it because Parker did not list among her many talents The Ability to Play Well with Others?
Dorothy Parker wrote strong prose for most of her life, and she wrote a lot of it, remaining relentlessly compassionate regarding, and interested in, the sufferings primarily of those who could not extricate themselves from the emotional tortures of unsuccessful personal relationships. Her stories were personal, yes, but also political and have as their shaping principles the larger issues of her day—which remain for the most part the larger issues of our own day (with Prohibition mercifully excepted).
Parker depicted the effects of poverty, economic and spiritual, upon women who remained chronically vulnerable because they received little or no education about the real world—the “real world” being the one outside the fable of love and marriage. But Parker also addressed the ravages of racial discrimination, the effects of war on marriage, the tensions of urban life, and the hollow space between fame and love. Of her domestic portraits one is tempted to say that, for Parker, the words “dysfunctional family” were redundant. She wrote about abortion when you couldn’t write the word and wrote about chemical and emotional addiction when the concepts were just a gleam in the analysts’ collective eye.
Parker approached these subjects with the courage and intelligence of a woman whose wit refused to permit the absurdities of life to continue along without comment. Irreverent toward anything held sacred —from romance or motherhood to literary teas and ethnic stereotypes —Parker’s stories are at once playful, painful, and poignant. Her own characteristic refusal to sit down, shut up, and smile at whoever was footing the bill continues to impress readers who come to her for the first time and delight those who are already familiar with the routine. Her humor intimidates some readers, but those it scares off are the ones she wouldn’t have wanted anyway.
She didn’t court or need the ineffectual. She would not, for example, have wept too long for having frightened good old Freddie from the sketch titled “Men I’m Not Married To.” Freddie, she tells us, “is practically a whole vaudeville show in himself. He is never without a new story of what Pat said to Mike as they were walking down the street, or how Abie tried to cheat Ikie, or what old Aunt Jemima answered when she was asked why she had married for the fifth time. Freddie does them in dialect, and I have often thought it is a wonder that we don’t all split our sides.” There, in brief, lies the difference between Parker’s gift and much of what passed for humor in her own (and in our own) time: Parker’s wit caricatures the self-deluded, the powerful, the autocratic, the vain, the silly, and the self-important; it does not rely on mean and small formulas, and it never ridicules the marginalized, the sidelined, or the outcast. When Parker goes for the jugular, it’s usually a vein with blue blood in it.

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