James Dickey was a great poet, a legend of the reading circuit, and -- after the best-selling Deliverance and its celebrated movie version -- a celebrity. This rich collection, reaching from 1943 to his death in 1997, and from a fledgling poet to an ailing man of letters, constitutes a vibrant short course in literature and poetry since World War II. From a 1959 letter: "For a long time I have been trying to do two things in poetry, both of which I have been told I should not do. The first is to get away, by whatever means, from the idea of a poem as objet d'art. . . . The other is to be able to make statements, one after the other: this happens, this happens, then this happens. To go with all this, I have also been trying to assert connections in nature where none exist: to make the world do what I say, rather than what it actually does." Matthew J. Bruccoli, James Dickey's literary personal representative, notes in his introduction: "The letters assembled in this volume represent perhaps twenty percent of James Dickey's located correspondence. The double rationale for selection was first to document the growth of a major writer -- how a scarcely educated jock discovered that he possessed genius and that writing was the only thing that counted -- then, second, to document the ways he fulfilled his genius and advanced his career. . . . The best letters here are the ones about writing . . . his correspondence documents the accuracy of his critical judgments." Dickey's correspondents include John Berryman, Harold Bloom, Philip Booth, Richard Howard, Denise Levertov, Robert Lowell, Donald Hall, James Merrill, Ezra Pound, Anne Sexton, Mark Strand, Robert Penn Warren, Richard Wilbur, andJames Wright. Entertaining and erudite, these letters reveal the fierce, complicated literary intellect of the man John Updike called "the high-flyer of American poets."
The essential entries from Dostoevsky's complete Diary, called his boldest experiment in literary form, are now available in this abridged edition; it is a uniquely encyclopedic forum of fictional and nonfictional genres.
... Kassel Lewis and Sylvia ( Surut ) . Religion : Jewish . Education : Harvard University , MA : BA , With Honors . Spouse : Linda Rannells ( m . 1951 , div . 1982 ) ; Margaret H. Marshall ( m . 1984 ) .
This volume contains more than 350 letters, the great majority of them previously unpublished, which are supplemented, as before, by scrupulous annotation and extensive cross-referencing; by a chronology covering the whole of Hardy's career ...
In The Camp Robber and Other Stories . Roslyn , New York : Walter J. Black , Inc. , 1979 . “ Tappan's Burro . ” In Tappan's Burro and Other Stories . New York : Simon and Schus. “ The Living Past . ” Zane Grey Collector 7.
Chronicles the life and career of American author Herman Melville, uncovering autobiographical elements in his diverse works, discussing the historical and cultural implications of his writing, and assessing his accomplishments as a writer.
Because of his Welsh name, Jenkins is often suggested as a model for Shakespeare's Welsh characters, particularly the schoolmaster Hugh Evans in The Merry Wives of Windsor; however his roots were not in Wales at all but in London and at ...
Quasimodo-Yeats Thomson Gale (Firm). The city is like a Dantesque hell , an alienating environment for everyone who happens to be trapped inside : At this point Quasimodo , having lost the initial enthusiasm of Giorno dopo giorno ...
Donaldson and a journalist, Newton S. Grimwood of the Chicago Evening Journal, disappeared in 1875 when a storm broke ... The invented narrator was a Gold Dust passenger, Mr. Harvey, who commences a ghoulish tale of entrapment in the ...
后期作品中贯穿着社会讽刺主题与高雅喜剧情调,主要描写战后那一代人愤世嫉俗与无忧无虑的人生态度。1937年沃第二次结婚,第二年发表他 ... 比金钱更有价值的光辉故居威廉·莎士比亚│William Shakespeare 从表面上看,美国马戏团老板费尼斯·巴纳姆(Phineas ...
他翻译过《少年维特之烦恼》,同时又是德国哲学的狂热信徒,但在大战中却强烈地反对德国与奥地利,并和墨索里尼一起推行战争政策,不过后来和墨索里尼分道扬镳了。现在我真想见一见这个“敌人”。但是由于害怕吃闭门羹,便给他留了一张写着我的旅馆地址的名片。