A contemporary presentation of work by the great nineteenth-century satirist, journalist, and horror writer
Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914) was an American satirist, critic, poet, short story writer, editor, and journalist. He eventually became the literary despot of the West Coast, so admired and feared that his review could make or break an aspiring author's career. Bierce's lucid, economic style and lack of maudlin sentiment have kept him popular while many of his once famous contemporaries have become obscure.
Known best for the pithy and acerbic Devil's Dictionary, which is excerpted in this anthology, Bierce is also regarded as one of the finest storytellers of the nineteenth century; his war and horror stories are especially compelling. Poetry and correspondence round out this selection from one of California's most curmudgeonly yet beloved authors.
John R. Dunlap teaches Latin, Greek, classical culture, and writing at Santa Clara University, where he has taught for thirty-one years. He received bachelor's degrees in English and Greek from the same institution, after which he spent two years in the U.S. Army. Other than a stint in Minnesota, where he lived while completing a master's degree in linguistics, he has lived exclusively in California.