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The Open Boat and Other Stories

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Four prized selections by one of America's greatest writers: "The Open Boat," based on a harrowing incident in the author's life: the 1897 sinking of a ship on which he was a passenger; "The Blue Hotel" and "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky," reflecting Crane's early travels in Mexico and the American Southwest; and the novella Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, a galvanizing portrait of life in the slums of New York City.

112 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1898

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About the author

Stephen Crane

1,420 books1,011 followers
Stephen Crane (1871-1900) was an American novelist, poet and journalist, best known for the novel, The Red Badge of Courage. That work introduced the reading world to Crane's striking prose, a mix of impressionism, naturalism and symbolism. He died at age 28 in Badenweiler, Baden, Germany.

Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database.

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5 stars
546 (28%)
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694 (36%)
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515 (26%)
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115 (5%)
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49 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 91 reviews
Profile Image for Sandra.
963 reviews333 followers
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November 25, 2017
Nel 1936, Hemingway scrisse in Verdi colline d'Africa che "I buoni scrittori sono Henry James, Stephen Crane, e Mark Twain. Ma si badi che così non sono in ordine di valore. Non è possibile stilare una classifica dei buoni scrittori."
Leggere tre racconti è poco per conoscere uno scrittore. Posso dire che La scialuppa, che racconta un fatto verificatosi nella vita di Crane –un naufragio nelle acque tra Cuba e la Florida, da cui si salvò con altri tre membri dell’equipaggio, grazie ad una scialuppa- è un racconto intenso, drammatico, che avrebbe potuto essere scritto da Hemingway.
Profile Image for Dan.
1,249 reviews52 followers
September 2, 2017
The Open Boat is one of the best short stories that I have read. If you want to know how to write 50 heart wrenching and dramatic pages essentially about floating in the surf between a sand bar and a rocky shore then this is the right book for you.

Crane's naturalism style is not one of plot twists but still dramatic because his use of imagery and especially his knack for writing engaging characters are so superb.

An interesting note is that this story is autobiographical.
Profile Image for Tayib.
106 reviews31 followers
July 13, 2008
Once, in a royal fit of frustration, I jumped up on the bed in the middle of night, the mattress balanced precariously on stolen cinder blocks, and yelled: Just put me on a boat in the middle of the ocean with one gallon of water and one box of biscuits and let me die there and then I'll tell you what life is like. My boyfriend was speechless. And half asleep.

Stephen Crane, as a young journalist, was actually stranded in a boat in the middle of the sea, and this is the true story of that. He made it home, married a beautiful girl, and died of TB at the age of 29. I'm 29.
Profile Image for Albus Eugene Percival Wulfric Brian Dumbledore.
586 reviews96 followers
May 7, 2018
gli albatri volavano obliqui verso est, dove il cielo era grigio, desolato ...
Tre racconti. Il primo, La scialuppa, ti coinvolge e ti emoziona e, a mio avviso, nulla ha da invidiare ad altre brevi avventure sul mare, narrate da autori come Conrad o Stevenson. Mentre ero lì con loro sulla barca, bagnato fradicio nonostante il mio… sud-ovest, mi veniva in mente la barca dei pescatori islandesi del Paradiso e Inferno di Stefánsson. Bah! Che azzardo.
«Se sto per affogare… se sto per affogare… se sto per affogare, perché, in nome dei sette numi folli padroni degli oceani, dovevo arrivare fino a qui a contemplare la terra e gli alberi?».
Gli altri due racconti, meno degni di nota.
Profile Image for George Ilsley.
Author 12 books314 followers
July 15, 2024
This volume collects four works from the 1980s: the novella "Maggie: A Girl of the Streets," and the short stories "The Open Boat," "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky," and "The Blue Hotel."

Stephen Crane makes a strong impression with these four short works; some of them I have re-read. It was my first time reading "Maggie" and "The Blue Hotel."
Profile Image for Teresa.
Author 9 books1,031 followers
September 3, 2016
I liked this story a lot more than I thought I would. The more I read of Crane, the more I like his style -- and wonder what else he might have produced if he hadn't died so young. This story fits in with the Crane poem:

A man said to the universe:
"Sir, I exist!"
"However," replied the universe,
"The fact has not created in me
A sense of obligation."


In "The Open Boat" the cadence of his words when the boat is on the water evoked the rising and falling of the rough waves that rock the open boat.
195 reviews
September 30, 2008
Am I still 16? No. Do I still love Naturalism and the whole idea of the individual powerless to the forces of nature and science? Apparently, yes. (My students thought "Open Boat" was repetitive and boring. For shame! Where is their angst?)
Profile Image for Vladivostok.
108 reviews12 followers
August 28, 2018
Tragic and suspenseful stories that rend the heart and fill with wonder. Intriguing characters imbue a variety of colorful American landscapes in this exceptional collection of realism. Stephen Crane is a gem; shame on me for not having read his works earlier.
Profile Image for Alyssa.
111 reviews4 followers
April 27, 2007
I was impressed with Crane's ability to write so fully and beautifully in a short story. The battle between the natural world and mankind and our apparent helplessness. Naturalism...
Profile Image for Andrea.
34 reviews4 followers
June 1, 2007
Clear, crisp prose that doesn't turn sparse. Nature's brutality head-on. There is something about this stuff that I love, and it's somewhere between the words.
Profile Image for Anina e gambette di pollo.
78 reviews33 followers
April 17, 2018
Sicuramente non sdraiato, in 28 anni di vita collezionò un po’ di tutto: padre pastore metodista, madre con problemi di equilibrio mentale (dovette sfornare 14 figli!), collegio militare, percorso scolastico svolazzante, scrittura e giornalismo.
Le vie fatiscenti di New York, le misere sale da ballo, la Bowery e gente che a lui piaceva (da qui uscì Maggie, ragazza di strada), relazioni sentimentali non facili, denutrito e sempre preda della tosse, gran lettore di resoconti sulla guerra civile pieni di fatti, ma privi delle sensazioni personali dei soldati (da qui uscì Il segno rosso del coraggio), le miniere di carbone della Pennsylvania (con i suoi reportage “tagliati”).
La difesa di una prostituta dall’arresto di un agente, poi Cuba e il viaggio sul Commodore che naufragò (è lui il giornalista del racconto La scialuppa), l’incontro con una signora un poco più vecchia di lui e l’amore, inviato per la guerra Greco-turca, e, dopo l’Inghilterra, la guerra ispano-americana (era lì quando i marines presero Guantanamo), si aggravò in Inghilterra e andò a morire a Baden.
Ha continuato ad essere in movimento in un’epoca dove i viaggi non erano molto brevi. Chissà cosa avrebbe combinato ora.

Di racconti ne scrisse molti.
Quello che apre la raccolta è proprio la descrizione del suo naufragio, della minuscola scialuppa su cui si trovò con il comandante, il cuoco ed il macchinista. Per un giorno e mezzo sballottati davanti alla costa, sulla quale riuscirono ad arrivare mandando in malora la scialuppa tenuta fino all’ultimo momento e proseguendo a nuoto. Sembra nulla, ma il macchinista non ce la fece.

In Un uomo e altri il protagonista è un uomo che ha vissuto molte vite, come molti degli uomini finiti sul confine del Messico e che hanno dato linfa al cinema western; miliardario, giocatore, buttafuori, vagabondo, astuto, il classico uomo+cavallo+pistola.
In Fuga a cavallo, uno yankee e il suo servitore messicano vivono una notte di terrore in un minuscolo villaggio, circondati da una banda di banditi ubriaconi. Riescono a fuggire, ma, inseguiti, se la caveranno solo per l’intervento dei rurales.
Aleggia una vena vagamente umoristica, specie il primo, e soprattutto la prossimità con McCarthy.

Anche I cinque topolini bianchi e Uomini saggi sono episodi che si svolgono a Città del Messico, con giovani yankee che bevono troppo, amano le scommesse e giocano ai dadi.
L’arrivo della sposa a Yellow Sky è un delizioso racconto sull’arrivo di coppia di sposi e su un uomo ubriaco che cerca rogne. La sposa non è particolarmente giovane, né bella, ma la galanteria è la galanteria.

La morte e il bambino. Un giornalista alla guerra greco-turca si fa travolgere e sconvolgere dall’esodo della popolazione civile. Poi il garbo di un ufficiale, la divisa, le piccole lontane nuvole dell’artiglieria turca. In nuce c’è il fantasma della bella morte che si nutrirà di tanto sangue nel secolo a venire. E’ greco e vuole combattere. Avanza. Le truppe in retrovia gli sembrano serene, curiose di quel ragazzo che vuol andare al fonte. Poi, ex abrupto, il sangue, le mascelle distrutte, i morti, la tracolla delle munizioni presa ad un cadavere e messa sulle sue spalle, che sembra volerlo strangolare. Fugge fino a crollare vicino ad una casupola dove un bimbo piccolo piccolo, lasciato indietro nella fuga, lo guarda stupito e gli chiede “Sei un uomo?”.

Un paio di appunti alla Ellio: nell’indice il secondo racconto non compare. Nella succinta biografia di Crane c’è, almeno, lo svarione dei giorni passati sulla scialuppa. Cavolo, ce li dice lui nel racconto!

16.02.2014
Profile Image for Marco Beneventi.
322 reviews8 followers
June 24, 2021
"La scialuppa":
Quattro uomini, un cuoco, un macchinista, un capitano e un giornalista, si ritrovano, dopo l'affondamento dell'oro piroscafo, su una piccola scialuppa sballottata dall'oceano.
Li attenderanno giorni di sofferenza in continua lotta per sopravvivere.

"La scialuppa" è il racconto del vero naufragio, avvenuto nel 1896, in cui si trovó lo stesso Crane (il giornalista nel racconto è proprio lui) durante il suo viaggio verso Cuba.
Con una scrittura asciutta, diretta, senza forzature o infiocchettamenti epici molto spesso presenti in questo genere di racconti, lo scrittore riesce a mettere il lettore davanti alla lotta nuda e cruda per la sopravvivenza, sviluppando quelle sensazioni di impotenza, solitudine e microscopicità tipiche dell'uomo davanti alla forza degli elementi mosso da Madre Natura.
Un breve racconto tragico e d'impatto.

"Fuga a cavallo":
Messico, Richardons, un pistolero Americano e José, il suo servitore messicano, fanno tappa in un piccolo villaggio per passare la notte, qui faranno la sgradevole conoscenza di un gruppo di uomini molesti ed ubriachi rosi dalla voglia di derubarlo.

"Fuga a cavallo", breve ma intenso racconto dal sapore di avventura del West, si propone come un racconto teso e d'atmosfera.
In poche pagine i pochi personaggi del racconto emergono con tutta la loro forza nonostante la mancanza di notizie sul passato degli stessi.
Un bel racconto, scorrevole e ben scritto da leggere tutto d'un fiato.

"Flanagan e la sua breve avventura di filibustiere":
Flanagan, irlandese con l'amore per il comando decide di cimentarsi nell'arte filibustiera, sceglierà così di mettersi al comando della "Foundling" una vecchia nave che sin da subito avrà problemi, con l'obiettivo di rifornire d'armi un manipolo di Cubani rivoltosi, il mare peró si sa puó essere a volte davvero pericoloso.

Un racconto che prende piede piano piano, una storia che prende le mosse dalla filosofia oer diventare poi cruda e dura realtà.
Una storia sì di mare ma soprattutto delle emozioni che chi lo solca puó trovarsi intimamente a vivere.

In questa raccolta di tre brevi racconti, Crane, uno degli scrittori americano simbolo dell'800 per quanto riguarda la letteratura realista, naturalista e impressionista, ci accompagna in un viaggio nelle emozioni umane, a fronte infatti di "fondali" ben dipinti, il lettore si imbatterà in un umanità vera, credibile e capace di connettersi a chi affronterà queste pagine.
Tre racconti brevi ma di sicuro impatto, grazie ad una scrittura immersiva e d'atmosfera.
Profile Image for Mallory.
229 reviews10 followers
October 22, 2017
4.5 stars
Stephen Crane is a master of the Realism genre, and its a shame that he died at 28; I would have loved to have more work from him. The four short stories in this collection are at varying degrees of success; the first story, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, is a mixed bag of Crane's strengths and weaknesses. The story could have been twenty pages shorter and still have hit the mark of a piece about Irish American poverty and the struggles of class differences. The title story, The Open Boat, is the most prominent of the four, with characters representing different portrayals of human survival, sharp, invigorating prose, and a dangerously intriguing setting: the ruthless, unforgiving ocean. I believe this is his most critically acclaimed story, and rightfully so. The third story, The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky, is only ten pages, and is the most forgetful of the collection. I believe this is the case because Crane is a master of developing characters, and the people in this story weren't as well developed. The last story is my favorite. The Blue Hotel never lets you know which character you should root for, always surprising you with sympathy you never thought you'd feel for certain characters. This jumble of human emotion and grievance is set against the backdrop of a Nebraskan blizzard, the plot as unyielding and ruthless as the setting. And of course, Stephen Crane can bloody well write, a feature I cannot live without:
"We picture the world as thick with conquering and elate humanity, but here, with the bugles of the tempest pealing, it was hard to imagine a peopled earth."
Profile Image for Saleh MoonWalker.
1,801 reviews278 followers
October 15, 2020
Onvan : The Open Boat and Other Stories - Nevisande : Stephen Crane - ISBN : 0486275477 - ISBN13 : 9780486275475 - Dar 112 Safhe - Saal e Chap : 1898
Profile Image for Ricks Eric .
13 reviews6 followers
May 17, 2009
The Open Boat is an intriguing short story by Stephen Crane that recognizes man's relationship to nature. This story portrays nature in sharp contrast to the romanticism of early American Romantic writers, who viewed nature as there nurturing mother. In many ways this story can be read as an allegory of mans loss of innocence due to the harsh reality of a changing world. This loss of innocence is portrayed as the men in the boat ship there view of nature from a romantic view to that a realist view. Written at the height of the Guided age in America this story provides great commentary to the then accepted views of social darwinism.

This is by far once of the best short stories I have ever read.
21 reviews
August 6, 2007
This book contains 4 short stories. Maggie: a Girl of the streets, which is good. Then The Open Boat, also good. The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky, which is my favorite. And The Blue Hotel, which I don't remember much of.
Profile Image for Jamie.
1,361 reviews538 followers
October 19, 2022
“When it occurs to a man that nature does not regard him as important, and that she feels she would not maim the universe by disposing of him, he at first wishes to throw bricks at the temple, and he hates deeply the fact that there are no bricks and no temples.”
Profile Image for Myles.
635 reviews32 followers
August 2, 2015
Read to color in a reference in "A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again." Not really my kind of reading, but Wallace is right. The sea is "primordial nada, bottomless, depths inhabited by cackling tooth-studded things rising toward you at the rate a feather falls."
25 reviews
February 10, 2010
Another great example of his descriptive ability of a situation. Crane puts you right there. It is a shame he died so young.
Profile Image for CIBooks.
330 reviews2 followers
June 25, 2023
6/10 Enjoyment Rating and 7/10 Quality Rating - Alongside 'Red Badge of Courage,' these four tales - published in the golden age of short stories - are Stephen Crane's seminal works. 'Maggie' is 'generally considered by critics to be the first work of American literary Naturalism,' a style perfected in 'The Open Boat' (Wikipedia). H. G. Wells considered the latter Crane's best work, while Hemmingway called it a perfect short story, which is how I found myself buying this volume.

Overall, I would recommend 'Maggie' and 'The Open Boat' but not the others. I don't feel terribly compelled to re-read any of these stories, though.

__________

MAGGIE: A GIRL FROM THE STREETS - 1893 - 7/10 Enjoyment Rating, 8/10 Quality Rating - 60 pages - This short novella (or long short story aka novellette) captures the gritty reality of life in the Irish tenements of the Bowery in Lower Manhattan. Maggie looks to escape the abuse and chaos a drunken mother inflicts on her and her siblings. Pete, a local dandy, introduces her to the excitement of the music hall and ballroom while her older brother Jimmy steps up to protect her.

Maggie is by far the best story in this collection and the only one which follows characters for more than a couple days.

THE BLUE HOTEL - 1898 - 5/10 Enjoyment and 7/10 Quality Rating - 21 pages - Five men are holed up inside the Blue Hotel waiting out a blizzard. They are unsure of how to handle the obviously unstable 'Swede' who is laughing maniacally, throwing out accusations, and trying to pick a fight. I can't say I enjoyed reading it, as ilthe story had a grotesque feeling about it. But, I was also compelled to keep reading past my bedtime. Objectively good, but not for me.

THE OPEN BOAT - 1897 - 7/10 Enjoyment and 8/10 Quality Rating - 20 pages - Four very different men navigate a 10-foot dinghy through huge waves after being shipwrecked off the coast of Florida. The story is inspired by Crane's own 30-hour experience and focuses on the men's emotional journey and the various shades of hope and despair. I felt something of Tolstoy in this approach.

Shortly after his shipwreck - and long before writing a fictional version - the author published 'Stephen Crane's Own Story' which can now be found free online. It doesn't add much to the telling but I found the old-timey slang of the time sort of interesting.

As the men row inland from the open sea, the waves grow in size and Intensity. If they capsize too far from land - and this dinghy surely will capsize - the men won't have enough energy to swim to shore. So, if the boat can't make it close enough, it's better to row back out to sea instead. The sighting of land and realisation that they must keep going is quite a journey.

Some of the impact here is undoubtedly lost on modern readers who have seen shipwrecks and huge storms on the big screen. Likewise, the detachment of literary naturalism lacks the novelty factor that would have appealed to Crane's audience.

The author's approach to the subject is excellent, though. Editor Vincent Starrett stated in his introduction to the 1921 collection of Crane's work entitled Men, Women and Boats that the author keeps "down the tone where another writer might have attempted 'fine writing' and have been lost."

Crane explores 'the serenity of nature amid the struggles of the individual—nature in the wind, and nature in the vision of men. She did not seem cruel to him, nor beneficent, nor treacherous, nor wise. But she was indifferent, flatly indifferent.'

'The Open Boat' is very well written and I'm sure I'd enjoy it again, but I also feel no particular reason to put it on my re-read list.

THE BRIDE COMES TO YELLOW SKY - 1898 - 6/10 Enjoyment and 7/10 Quality Rating - 21 pages - A small-town sheriff returns to Nebraska with his bride. They're traveling first-class simultaneously delighted, and feeling out of place. Back home, a drunken gunslinger is looking for a fight. Objectively good, but not my kind of story.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 91 reviews

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