Tigers are Better-Looking is a collection of short stories written by Dominican author Jean Rhys, published in 1968 by André Deutsch and reissued by Penguin ten years later.[1] This collection's first eight stories were written by Rhys during her 1950s period of obscurity and first published in the early 1960s. The second nine are reissued from her 1927 debut collection The Left Bank and Other Stories. In 1979, the title story from Rhys's collection was adapted into a UK-produced short film, directed by Hussein Shariffe.[2]
Stories found in Tigers are Better-Looking
edit- "Till September Petronella"
- "The Day they Burned the Books"
- "Let Them Call It Jazz"
- "Tigers are Better-Looking"
- "Outside the Machine"
- "The Lotus"
- "A Solid House"
- "The Sound of the River"
Stories found in The Left Bank and Other Stories
edit(Introduced by a preface to the original 1927 collection of twenty-two)
- "Illusion"
- "From a French Prison"
- "Mannequin"
- "Tea with an Artist"
- "Mixing Cocktails"
- "Again the Antilles"
- "Hunger"
- "La Grosse Fifi"
- "Vienne"
Previous publications
editTill September Petronella The London Magazine 1960
The Day they Burned the Books The London Magazine 1960
Tigers are Better-Looking The London Magazine 1962
Let Them Call it Jazz The London Magazine 1962
The Sound of the River Art and Literature no. 9 1966
The Lotus Art and Literature no. 11 1967
Outside the Machine Winter's Tales (Macmillan)
A Solid House Voices, Michael Joseph, 1963
References
edit- ^ Rhys, Jean (1968). Tigers are better-looking, with a selection from The left bank Stories. London: André Deutsch. ISBN 0-233-95987-4. OCLC 251900714.
- ^ Tigers are Better-Looking, retrieved 2020-05-07