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  • Pencil Sketches: Dickinson/Walser
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    From $8.54 (New)

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Buy from Amazon $31.40$8.43 $27.50 $22.50 $17.50 $12.50 Feb 21 Feb 25 Feb 28 Mar 3 Mar 6 Mar 10 Mar 14 Mar 17 Mar 21 Mar 24 Mar 28$20.00, Feb 21 - Feb 24$12.30, Feb 21 - Feb 24$12.30, Feb 21 7:10 pm$20.00, Feb 21 - Feb 24$15.42, Feb 24 2:28 pm$12.30, Feb 21 - Feb 24$15.42, Mar 5 12:46 am$15.42, Feb 24 2:28 pm$15.30, Mar 5 12:46 am$31.40, Mar 16 1:56 pm$15.42, Feb 24 2:28 pm$11.22, Mar 16 1:56 pm$13.19, Mar 28 2:40 am$8.54, Mar 28 2:40 am$8.43, Mar 28 2:40 am 2,243,7042,385,366 2,359,375 2,328,125 2,296,875 2,265,625 Feb 21 Feb 25 Feb 28 Mar 3 Mar 6 Mar 10 Mar 14 Mar 17 Mar 21 Mar 24 Mar 28

Price Details

New

Last Seen $8.54 Mar 28, '16
Highest $20.00 Feb 21, '16
Lowest $8.54 Mar 28, '16
Average $13.26 (30d avg)
$15.60 (Lifetime average)
Added Feb 21, 2016

3rd Party New

Last Seen $8.43 Mar 28, '16
Highest $15.42 Feb 24, '16
Lowest $8.43 Mar 28, '16
Average $8.43 (30d avg)
$15.17 (Lifetime average)
Added Feb 21, 2016

3rd Party Used

Last Seen $13.19 Mar 28, '16
Highest $31.40 Mar 16, '16
Lowest $12.30 Feb 21, '16
Average $23.42 (30d avg)
$19.56 (Lifetime average)
Added Feb 21, 2016

Sales Rank

30 day average: 2,370,707

Product Description

This publication brings together Robert Walser's microscripts and Emily Dickinson's poem manuscripts for the first time. Although Walser, who was born shortly before Dickinson died, was most likely unaware of her work, both writers were obsessively private as well as peculiarly attentive to the visual dimension of their texts. Walser wrote in tiny, inscrutable script on narrow strips of paper using an antiquated German alphabet that was long considered indecipherable. Only recently have these scripts been shown to consist of early drafts of the author's published texts. Similarly, Dickinson fitted her poetic fragments to carefully torn pieces of envelope or stationery, which were discovered among her posthumous papers. (W.G. Sebald called Walser a "clairvoyant of the small," and this description might apply to Dickinson as well.) Rarely in literature has the manner in which words are made been so integral to the way they might be read.

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