Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

The Fifth Son of the Shoemaker

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Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
1930

Pages
  
282 pp.

Author
  
Donald Corley

Followed by
  
The Haunted Jester

Cover artist
  
Donald Corley

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print (hardback)

Originally published
  
1930

Genre
  
Novel

Publisher
  
Robert M. McBride

The Fifth Son of the Shoemaker httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenbbaThe

Preceded by
  
The House of Lost Identity

Similar
  
The House of Lost Identity, The Haunted Jester, Double Murder in New Orle, The Congregation, Mayhem in South Texas

The Fifth Son of the Shoemaker is a book by Donald Corley, illustrated by the author. It was his best known work and his only novel, though according to Lin Carter it is actually "a volume of short stories under the guise of a novel." The book was first published in hardcover in New York by Robert M. McBride in September 1930.

Contents

Plot

The book concerns the story of a Russian family of hereditary shoemakers who have immigrated from Moscow to New York, their establishment in a humble East Side cellar, rise from rags to riches, and travels around the world.

Reception

The New York Times called the novel Corley's "best-known work."

Lin Carter describes Corley's style as possessing a quality of "gorgeousness", which he characterizes as having "the sort of verbal richness that bejewels the pages of Clark Ashton Smith's work or the Arabian Nights ... lazy and singing, [with] a certain playfulness to it ..."

References

The Fifth Son of the Shoemaker Wikipedia


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