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169 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 1988
Yet I do not want the woman to look at me. She will look into my face and I will have to speak to her. I will have to explain to her what I meant by all those pages that I covered with my writing when I was a man in the library of a manor-house and she was a young woman looking out at her dream-prairie near the town of Ideal. All this is too much to explain.
I have always understood that the people whose names are on the pages of my books are all dead. Some of those people were once alive but now they are dead. Others of those people have never been alive; they have always been dead.
Today I am thinking of the people whose names are on the covers of books: the same people who wrote the pages inside the books. I have always supposed that all of those people are dead. But I used to suppose that the people first wrote the pages of the books and then died. They wrote their books and then they died. Today I believe that the people who wrote the pages of the books may have died before they wrote.
Someone reading this page deep in the Institute of Prairie Studies may wonder why a man of my age and standing writes at this table for day after day about a twelve-years-old child. But I am not writing about a twelve-years-old child. Each person is more than one person. I am writing about a man who sits at a table in a room with books around the wall and who writes for day after day with a heaviness pressing on him.
I would like to write more about the skyscraper of marble and glass on the Great Plain of America, but that sort of writing is by no means easy. I have written that sort of writing only since I first thought of my editor as thinking of me as dead.
It is not easy to think of myself as a man who is thought of as dead. I might as easily think of myself as dead. And perhaps this is what some writers do before they begin to write. They think of themselves as dead. Or they think of themselves as thought of as dead.
I have always understood that the people whose names are on the pages of my books are all dead. Some of those people were once alive but now they are all dead. Others of those people have never been alive; they have always been dead.
Today I am thinking of the people who names are on the covers of books: the same people who wrote the pages inside the books. I have always supposed that all those people are dead. But I used to suppose that the people first wrote the pages of the books and then died. They wrote their books and then they died. Today I believe that the people who wrote the pages of the books may have died before they wrote. They died, or they thought of themselves as having died, or they thought of themselves as thought of as dead — and then they wrote.
The most ambitious, sustained and powerful piece of writing Murnane has to date brought off. “Inland” is a letter to the girl from Bendigo Street: a declaration of love; a lament over lost opportunity. . . Woven into this narrative are a number of motifs whose common element is resurrection.
I had believed for most of my life that a page of a book is a window. Then I had learned that a page of a book is a mirror.

"I am writing in the library of a manor-house...in Szolnok County. Now, something other than heaviness urges me to leave this table and to walk to the windows. I have to walk to the windows in order to learn whether I remembered, just now, the sight of a certain well, or whether I was dreaming. Perhaps I could say without leaving this table that I only dreamed of the sight of my well. If you recall, reader, I had not left my table when I began this inquiry. I had only dreamed of myself leaving my table and then returning to my table and then trying to recall what I might have seen through my windows. I dreamed of myself here at my table and then I wondered whether the man I dreamed of - whether that man remembered the sight of a certain well or whether he was dreaming. I will try for your sake, reader, to distinguish between what I see and what I remember and what I dream of myself seeing or remembering. My room contains only this table, the chair underneath me, a steel cabinet, and all the shelves of books around the walls. I sit at this table and sometimes I write a little, or I dream of myself writing. The book would be about people who were alive and had not died, and about grasslands. If the writer of books was a ghost, did he see the same view that I see from my window? I believe the writer of books saw the ghosts of things from my window. He saw things that I might have seen long ago but cannot see today. You are dreaming of yourself writing in the library of a manor-house, in Szolnok County, but while you were dreaming at your table I was writing on pages of books. I saw ghosts of my own books in ghosts of libraries where no one comes to unlock the glass doors of bookcases. I saw ghosts of men staring sometimes at ghosts of glass panes. I saw ghosts of images of clouds drifting through the ghost of an image of sky behind ghosts of covers and spines of ghosts of books...And I went on writing so that ghosts of images of pages of mine would drift over ghosts of plains in a ghost of a world towards ghosts of images of skies in libraries of ghosts of the ghosts of books. Some people have said that an eye is a window, but anyone who has looked carefully has seen that an eye is a mirror. I had thought of that man sitting at his table and not reading but writing. I had thought of him as having written all the pages around me. And then I thought of him as being about to write on the page that I had been about to write on when I left my table and walked towards the window. One day in this room I read in the preliminary pages of an unlikely book these words: 'There is another world but it is in this one.' Paul Eluard The other world , in other words, is a place that can only be seen or dreamed of by those people known to us as narrators of books or characters within books. If you or I, reader, happen to glimpse part of that world drifting past, as it were, it is because we have seen or dreamed of ourselves seeing for a moment as a narrator or a character in a book sees or dreams of seeing."