The Left Bank and Other Stories is the first collection of short stories and literary debut of Dominican author Jean Rhys. It was first published by Jonathan Cape (London) and Harper & Brothers (New York) in 1927, and contained a preface by Ford Madox Ford.
The original subtitle of the collection was "sketches and studies of present-day Bohemian Paris".
Most of the twenty-two stories are impressionistic vignettes based on Rhys's own life experiences in and around the Left Bank of Paris. Some ("Mixing Cocktails and "Again the Antilles") are drawn from Rhys's early years in Dominica. The final story, Vienne, is based on her post-World War I life in Vienna with first husband , and was originally published in The Transatlantic Review in 1924.
Publication of The Left Bank and Other Stories was sponsored by Rhys's lover and literary mentor, Ford Madox Ford, sending the stories to his London contact, influential publisher's reader Edward Garnett. The book was well received by critics on its initial release, establishing Rhys's early writing career.
The book went out of print during Rhys's 1939-1966 period of obscurity but, following the resurgence of her career due to Wide Sargasso Sea (1966), selections from The Left Bank were republished in part by André Deutsch in Tigers are Better-Looking (1968), which included nine of the original twenty-two stories. The volumw was next republished 1976 by W. W. Norton & Company, then again after Rhys's death by Penguin Classics incorporated into a wider compilation entitled Jean Rhys, The Collected Short Stories.
Biographer Carole Angier reports that this first volume of short stories garnered Rhys significant critical approval.
Literary critic Rayner Heppenstall deems RhysâÂÂs pieces in The Left Bank to be âÂÂless than brilliant.âÂÂ
Evelyn Toynton in The American Scholar praises the âÂÂmocking lucidityâ with which Rhys depicted the sexual and social degradations of her female protagonists, adding this caveat
RhysâÂÂs short fiction in The Left Bank is notable for the range of narrative devices she deploys. Half of the stories are told by women, both explicitly and inferred by dialogue, as well as participant and nonparticipant narrators. The point-of-view is often that of limited omnicent.
The female narrators in these stories escort the reader through the Bohemian settings of her wealthy benefactors and lovers: