Earthly Creatures is a collection of short fiction by Charles R. Jackson published in 1953 by Farrar, Straus and Young.
Preface: A note to the reader by Charles Jackson.
Jackson's motivation for writing this short story collection was two-fold: his desperate financial situation, and his desire to maintain his presence in the literary community.
Ballantine Books and Farrar, Straus and Young arranged to have the collection issued in both hardcover ($1.50 retail) and paperback (35 cents). Sales were boosted by a number of good reviews: 85,000 of the mass market paperbacks were sold.
Literary critic John W. Crowley reports âÂÂSales were light overall and almost exclusively in paperback, making the hardcover format (with jacket copy not elsewhere available) by far the rarest of Jackson's books.
Critical approval of the collection was widespread, even âÂÂgenerous.â Critic Harvey Breit at the New York Times Book Review declared: âÂÂWe have never seen Mr. Jackson better...â October 4, 1953.
Budd Schulberg in New York Times Book Review: âÂÂA giftedly readable and provocative collection...it is in a far deeper sense that this fine group of stories enriches us...â Willian Peden at the Saturday Review: âÂÂThe central character of most of the short stories in Charles Jackson's Earthly Creatures is his own worst enemy...We watch him, in story after story, methodically going about the business of destroying himself.âÂÂ
Jackson's himself did not think highly of the volume; only two of the stories, âÂÂThe Breakâ and âÂÂThe Boy Who Ran Awaryâ did he consider satisfactory. Jackson wrote in the preface he was âÂÂfully (perhaps I should say âÂÂbitterlyâÂÂ) conscious of the knowledge they are somewhat less than the ideal in a form I love.âÂÂ
Despite Jackson's hopes to the contrary Earthly Creatures âÂÂdid not revive the career of a writer still largely known for a first novel,â namely The Lost Weekend (1944).
Biographer Mark Connelly writes: