Steps
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Winner of the National Book Award for Fiction
From the esteemed author of the classics The Painted Bird and Being There comes this award-winning novel about one man’s sexual and sensual experiences, the fabric from which his life has been woven.
Jerzy Kosinski’s classic vision of moral and sexual estrangement brilliantly captures the disturbing undercurrents of modern politics and culture. In this haunting novel, distinctions are eroded between oppressor and oppressed, perpetrator and victim, narcissism and anonymity. Kosinski portrays men and women both aroused and desensitized by an environment that disdains the individual and seeks control over the imagination in his unforgettable and immensely provocative work.
Publisher : Grove Press; 1st Grove Press Ed edition (August 7, 1997)
Language : English
Paperback : 148 pages
ISBN-10 : 0802135269
ISBN-13 : 978-0802135261
Item Weight : 7.8 ounces
Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.5 x 8.25 inches
Customers say
Customers have mixed opinions about the book’s writing quality, with some finding it well written while others disagree. The story quality also receives mixed feedback, with one customer describing it as dark and unusual, while another notes that not all stories are winners. The ebook version receives negative feedback, with one customer describing it as weird and disjointed.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Jackie Craven –
Stunning.
A surrealistic inner landscape revealed through dreamlike episodes, each fantastic yet eerily familiar. Step by step, Iâm drawn into this world. I think Iâll never recover from this book. (And I donât want to!)
Dr. James R. Fisher Jr. –
STEPS
My agent, Ned Hamson, knowing I was writing an unconventional novel of my experience in South Africa as a young American executive (GREEN ISLAND IN A BLACK SEA) during apartheid, suggested I read STEPS.Kosinski and I were born in the same year at opposite ends of the bloody Second World War. He never had time for innocence while I was an American boy held safely in her bosom in Middle America. All that was shattered for me when I went to South Africa as a young executive to form a new chemical company in 1968, the year before Kosinski won the National Book Award for STEPS.I not only read this novel and his other works of fiction, but also James Park Sloan’s biography, JERZY KOSINSKI.STEPS and other Kosinski fiction demonstrate a mind that has been shattered by people he admires and people he finds out to be both brutal and brutish. THE PAINTED BIRD is an unexpurgated version of reality as a bookend to Alan Paton’s TOO LATE THE PHALAROPE. Both authors deal with the inhumanity of man to man, but Kosinski chooses to walk the tightrope of despair and psychosexual fantasy.Kosinski and I are both trained social scientists and published authors in that discipline. He went to one of the most prestigious universities in the country (Columbia) and had difficulty with his faculty advisers and never acquired his Ph.D. I had similar problems only I found my way from land grant institutions (Iowa, and University of South Florida) to safe haven in the university system of the future, writing my dissertation and defense for Walden University, a fully accredited university but not yet prestigious in the same sense as the Ivy League.STEPS is a triumph of mind over matter and soul over eternity, a book that will stay with you the way Sherwood Anderson’s WINESBURG, OHIO does which was written for an earlier generation. Kosinski saw life naked, undisguised, and as Joseph Campbell might add, a time that never rose above its sexual organs or its lust for power and pleasure.STEPS is concise, anecdotal and experimental the way James Joyce’s ULYSSES was. The anecdotes are connected by style, mood, and tone that bite the psyche as if it had teeth. You know the work is art because the fragments hold together like an illuminating collage.STEPS shows an intensely grim world characterized by brutality, exploitation, and calloused indifference. The impact is like a nightmare where violence breeds only more violence, and the protagonist is lost in the maze of emotion with no way out.Many of the incidents in STEPS depict sexual exploitation. It is the predator-prey dance where the narrator exploits a woman, but he himself becomes the victim. In one instance, the narrator, an archeological student stranded without money on an island, collapses from hunger. Two fat old women feed him and then assault him sexually.Among the scenes of perversion, many include accounts of sexual pleasure being derived from inflicting or witnessing pain. Sociological studies of Theodore Adorno (Authoritarian Personality) and Erich Fromm (The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness) come to mind to confirm Kosinski’s thesis.STEPS captures the whirling dervish of postmodern society with no leavening with virtue. Most of the episodes present actions of lust, greed, brutality, and corruption without mitigating circumstances, a little like watching the nightly news on television.STEPS could be viewed as a series of ‘dirty’ anecdotes. The reality it portrays is the vicious and perverted side of life debased from human nature.STEPS suggest narcissistic disassociation of a single person, or perhaps a series of people. That is the subtle strength of its fragmentation and a narrator who is never identified, leaving open the possibility that different narrators are functioning in the various episodes. In any case, regardless of the reader’s reaction, the concrete style and raw intensity of the actions are not likely to be quickly dismissed from the mind of the reader.To give you a sense of the fickle nature of publishing, 21-pages of STEPS was sent to its original publisher and several others six years after it had won the National Book Award. All turned it down. In 1981, the entire text of STEPS was sent to several literary agents and was turned down again by everyone. Kosinski committed suicide in 1991 at the age of 57, hounded by detractors, none of whom recognized his genius. If you are a writer, take note and persist.
Amazon Customer –
A lot of short stories?
many anecdotal type stories. Some are only a few paragraphs. Hard to believe this book won the national book award.
Ben –
Great book, terrible Kindle transfer
Very disturbing and creative group of stories; things that will stick with you. Unfortunately,it has many many typos. Lack of periods, the word barn has become bam. You have to almost translate the words at certain points.
Jeff T –
A unique reading experience
Some haunting writing here.Not all stories are winners.But a few will definitely bore into yourbrain and stay in your memory bank.
Dan Donatelli –
Powerful Stuff
I loved this book so much I read it pretty much twice in a row. Kosinski’s prose is beautifully simple and engaging, but squeamish readers might want to avoid this book, because it contains a high dosage of disturbing stories and images and thoughts. But to be fair it also contains powerfully brilliant same.
joenathan3 –
Bait and Switch
This bookâs cover says âStepsâ by Jerzy Kosinski. However, when you open it up it turns out to be a different novel entirelyââCloserâ by Dennis Cooper. When I contacted the publisherâGrove Pressâthey were very ho hum about the mistake. Since itâs now past the window for returns, Iâm stuck with this book. Be very careful about any book published by Grove Press. Make sure youâre getting what you think youâre getting.
G. S. Kennedy –
Dark, strange stories
I bought it based on David Foster Wallace’s high praise, since I very much enjoy his writing. The stories are dark and unusual, sort of Kafkaesque, but refreshing in an unsettling way.
Christopher Golightly –
Weird but trult brilliant writing.
Dominik Ziller –
In seinem zweiten Buch setzt sich Kosinski mit den Schwächen des Menschen auseinander. In gelegentlich drastischer Sprache setzt er collagenartig kurze Prosastücke zusammen, in denen häufig die Sexualität im Mittelpunkt steht. Moralfrei, mit knapper Sprache, ohne jedes Gramm dichterisches Fett. Gelegentlich bleibt man etwas ratlos zurück, wirkt die Prosa eher wie Poesie und lässt viele Interpretationen zu. Auf jeden Fall ein sehr lesenswertes Buch.