From Our Editors
A genre-bending comic novel of dramatically large proportions,
A Confederacy of Dunces is infamous for
its originality. First published in 1980 and winner of the Pulitzer
Prize, this hysterical novel features the bloated but brilliant
Ignatius J. Reilly, a now-mythic figure in contemporary American
fiction. Following his misdeeds in the murky streets of New
Orleans, readers will travel with Ignatius and his soused mother to
the Night of Joy bar, through the myopia of Doris Day cinema, and
into the sheer fun of medieval philosophy.
From the Publisher
Foreword by Walker Percy. A spectacular, Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by this master of comedy. beloved by readers and critics alike. The place is the French Quarter, the character denizens of New Orleans' lower depths.
About the Author
John Kennedy Toole was born in New Orleans in 1937 and graduated
from Tulane University. He earned a master's degree from Columbia
University. While in high school, he wrote a humor column and a
novel, The Neon Bible. He later taught at Hunter College in
Manhattan, the University of Southwestern Louisiana, and St. Mary's
Dominican College. His novel, Confederacy of Dunces, winner of the
1981 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, was published years after he
killed himself following its initial rejection by publishers.
Walker Percy, born in Alabama, raised in Mississippi, and a former
resident of Louisiana, was a member of a prominent Southern family
who lost his parents at an early age and grew up as the foster son
of his father's cousin. Percy graduated from the University of
North Carolina and received his M.D. from Columbia, but was a
nonpracticing physician who devoted much of his life to his
writing. Percy's witty and provocative first novel, The Moviegoer
(1961), won the 1962 National Book Award, but Charles Poore
considers The Last Gentleman (1966) "an even better book." Love in
the Ruins (1971) marks a sharp change in method and subject from
the first two novels. A doomsday story set "at the end of the Auto
Age," it exposes many foibles and abuses in contemporary life
through sharp satire and extravagant fantasy. Whereas Love in the
Ruins is funny, Percy's next novel, Lancelot (1977) is the rather
bleak and pessimistic story of a deranged man who blows up his home
when he finds proof of his wife's infidelities and then tells his
story in an asylum for the mentally disturbed. Its apocalyptic
vision is expressed in a more positive and affirmative way in The
Second Coming (1980), which takes its title from the fact that it
resurrects the character of Will Barret from The Last Gentleman and
locates him, a quarter-century older, finding love and meaning in a
cave.
Hardcover
September 1, 1998
Wings Books
0517122707
9780517122709