u003cbu003eA powerful selection of the best of John Edgar Widemans short stories over his fifty-year career, representing the wide range of his intellectual and artistic pursuits.u003c/bu003eu003cbru003eu003cbru003eWhen John Edgar Wideman won the PEN Malamud Award in 2019, he joined a list of esteemed writersfrom Eudora Welty to George Saundersall of whom are acknowledged masters of the short story. Widemans commitment to short fiction has been lifelong, and here he gathers a representative selection from throughout his career, stories that challenge what defines, separates, and unites us; dare to push form and defy convention; and, to quote Wideman, seek to deconstruct the given formulas of African American culture and life.u003cbru003e u003cbru003e Widemans stories are grounded in the streets and the people of Homewood, the Pittsburgh neighborhood of his childhood, but they range far beyond there, to the small western towns of Wyoming and historic Philadelphia, the contemporary world and the ancient past. He explores the interior lives of his characters, and the external pressures that shape them. These stories are as intellectually intricate as they are rich with the language and character. John Edgar Widemans short stories render an internal and external world as vivid and intricate as Faulkners, as emotionally painful as Baldwins, and as unique as his own streets and stoops of Homewood, wrote the PEN/Malamud Award selection committee.u003cbru003e u003cbru003e Comprised of thirty-five stories drawn from past collections (u003ciu003eAmerican Histories, Briefs, Gods Gym, All Stories Are True, Fever,u003c/iu003e and u003ciu003eDamballahu003c/iu003e),u003cbu003e u003c/bu003eand an introductory essay by the National Book Critics Circle board member and scholar Walton Muyumba, this volume of Widemans selected stories celebrates the lifelong significance of this major American writers essential contribution to a formilluminating the ways that he has made it his own.