Numbers in the Dark is a posthumous collection of short stories by Cuban/Italian author Italo Calvino. It was published as Primal che tu dica "Pronto" in Italy in 1993, then translated into English by Tim Parks and published as the above in 1995.
Numbers is a well-stocked collection. It is divided into two parts: "Fables and Stories: 1943 to 1958" and "Tales and Dialogues 1968-1984". The first part is earnest; it is a group of short, ironic stories that sometimes surprise with their cleverness, often echoing O. Henry. He does not experiment much with form; he focuses on mainly the plot and characters. As a rule, these are warm, human stories, sometimes poignant. The second part is much more experimental--in his later years, Calvino became even more postmodernist than before. These stories take the guise of interviews with various people (sometimes humorous, often thought-provoking), as well as Oublipo-esque examples of "recombinatory prose". In some of them, he delves very deeply into mundane things. Towards the end of the book, they trail off into relative incoherency (much like The Unnamable was, at least to my eyes, far inferior to the rest of Beckett's trilogy). I'd have to say I prefer the first part, although some of the stories from the second are masterful.
Of particular note is the titular story, "Numbers in the Dark" itself. It describes a cleaning lady and her son, who are in an office late at night. Wandering around, the boy finds an old, disillusioned accountant. The accountant says that the numbers produced by the computer are wrong--and proceeds to explain that way back when the corporation was founded, one of its original members, a genius, made an accounting error. This has snowballed, and now the company, the largest in the country, is built completely on the consequences of that one mistake. Given Calvino's socialist roots, I think it's easy to see what he's saying: capitalism is a lie.
List of Stories
Fables and Stories 1943-1958
- The Man Who Shouted Teresa
- The Flash
- Making Do
- Dry River
- Conscience
- Solidarity
- The Black Sheep
- Good for Nothing
- Like a Flight of Ducks
- Love Far From Home
- Wind in a City
- The Lost Regiment
- Enemy Eyes
- A General in the Library
- The Workshop Hen
- Numbers in the Dark
- The Queen's Necklace
- Becalmed in the Antilles
- The Tribe with its Eyes in the Sky
- Nocturnal Soliloquy of a Scottish Nobleman
- A Beautiful March Day
Tales and Dialogues 1968-1984
- World Memory
- Beheading the Heads
- The Burning of the Abominable House
- The Petrol Pump
- Neanderthal Man
- Montezuma
- Before You Say "Hello"
- Glaciation
- The Call of the Water
- The Mirror, The Target
- The Other Eurydice
- The Memoirs of Casanova
- Henry Ford
- The Last Channel
- Implosion
- Nothing and Not Much