Something to Remember Me By (1991) is a collection of stories by the 1976
Nobel Laureate Saul Bellow. It includes two of his previously released novellas,
The Bellarosa connection (1989) and
A Theft (1989), and
Something to remember me by, a 35 page short story.
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Product ReviewIn 1989, both in paperback original, appeared Bellow's hundred-page-or-so novella A Theft, followed a few months later by The Bellarosa Connection, which came in at about the same length. Add now "Something to Remember Me By," a 35-page story that lends its admittedly poignant title to the present volume of the three tales under one cover. The new piece is the remembrance - back in Chicago of 1933 - of a 17-year-old boy's first encounter with a hooker, this wonderfully comic episode occurring against the somber backdrop of the lingering death of the boy's mother by cancer. Though it may stretch credibility at a moment or two, the story brims over in the riches of Bellow's observing eye and his pulse-perfect renderings of life's textures in immigrant Chicago during a dreary Depression winter. Those are far luckiest who didn't buy the earlier two separate volumes, since here are all three for less than the price of one. Including a preface by Bellow on the merits and virtues of writing short. (Kirkus Reviews)