Biography: writers Books
HarperCollins Publishers Man Who Forgot How To Read
£9.99
Graywolf Press Ongoingness: The End of a Diary
Book Synopsis[Manguso] has written the memoir we didn't realize we needed. The New YorkerIn Ongoingness, Sarah Manguso continues to define the contours of the contemporary essay. In it, she confronts a meticulous diary that she has kept for twenty-five years. I wanted to end each day with a record of everything that had ever happened, she explains. But this simple statement belies a terror that she might forget something, that she might miss something important. Maintaining that diary, now eight hundred thousand words, had become, until recently, a kind of spiritual practice.Then Manguso became pregnant and had a child, and these two Copernican events generated an amnesia that put her into a different relationship with the need to document herself amid ongoing time.Ongoingness is a spare, meditative work that stands in stark contrast to the volubility of the diaryit is a haunting account of mortality and impermanence, of how we struggle to find clarity in the chaos of time that rushes around and over and through us.Bold, elegant, and honest . . . Ongoingness reads variously as an addict's testimony, a confession, a celebration, an elegy. The Paris ReviewManguso captures the central challenge of memory, of attentiveness to life . . . A spectacularly and unsummarizably rewarding read. Maria Popova, Brain Pickings
£13.50
University of Tennessee Press A Room Forever: The Life, Work, Letters Of Breece
Book SynopsisAfter twenty-six-year-old author Breece D'J Pancake took his own life in April 1979, the West Virginian's posthumously published short-story collection made a considerable impact on the world of letters. In A Room Forever, Thomas E. Douglass offers a detailed portrait of Pancake's short life, examining the varied circumstances and emotional forces that led to the writer's suicide and exploring Pancake's influence on contemporary fiction generally and Appalachian writing in particular. Douglass has recreated the key events of the young artist's life: his West Virginia childhood, his romantic losses, his education as a writer at the University of Virginia, and the acceptance of his work by the East Coast literary establishment. Through analysis of the story fragments reproduced in this volume, including "The Conqueror" and "Shouting Victory, " Douglass illustrates the recurring themes - such as fear of failure and the inability to escape disaster - that Pancake expressed so eloquently in his work, and he shows their origins in the writer's own personal history. Douglass examines the degree to which Pancake drew on his memories of life in Appalachia and discusses Pancake's influence on other Appalachian writers such as Pinckney Benedict.
£26.21
University of Tennessee Press Journal Of A Georgia Woman, 1870-1872
Book SynopsisEliza Frances “Fanny” Andrews (1840–1931) was born into south-ern aristocracy in Washington, Georgia. The acclaimed author of Journal of a Georgia Girl: 1864–1865, she was an exceptional woman who went on to become a journalist, writer, teacher, and world-renowned botanist. In 1870, as Andrews was working on her first novel, she embarked on a visit to wealthy “Yankee kin” in Newark, New Jersey. The trip had a profound effect on her life, as she was astonished by the contrasts between North and South. This previously unpublished segment of Andrews’s writings begins with her New Jersey sojourn and ends with her mother’s death in 1872. It is remarkable for the light it sheds on the social and economic transformations of the Reconstruction era, particularly as they were perceived and experienced by a southern woman.Andrews was an intelligent, sharp-witted, and skilled observer, and these qualities shine through her engaging memoir. She records her reactions to Newark society and the economic base on which it stood, comparing southern gentility and agriculture to northern brusqueness and industry. Moreover, while the diary reveals clearly the social and cultural attitudes of aristocratic southerners of the period, it also foreshadows the beginning of change as, for example, a visit to a factory opens Andrews’s eyes to the advantages of the new economy. She also recounts her frustrations with the role of southern women, exalted on the one hand but severely restricted on the other. These stark contrasts and Andrews’s own mixed feelings give the diary much of its power.Also included in this volume are six of Andrews’s magazine and newspaper articles that appeared in the national press around the time she was keeping this journal. Taken together, her private and public writings from this period show a maturing nineteenth-century woman confronting a culture turned upside down in the new world of the Reconstruction-era South.Andrews’s memoir, with accompanying introduction and commentary by Kit Rushing, will appeal to general readers with an interest in the nineteenth-century South as well as to historians of women, the Civil War era, and nineteenth-century America.
£29.66
Ariadne Press Arthur Schnitzler Biography
£14.25
Counterpoint John Milton: A Hero of Our Time
£15.29
£14.39
£12.63
iUniverse Le Grand Livre de Proust
£19.56
Wildside Press Lemady: Episodes of a Writer's Life
£14.98
Wildside Press The Thomas Ligotti Reader
Book Synopsis
£28.46
Counterpoint Joe Jones: A Novel
£13.29
Publication Consultants The Power of Authors
£14.95
1st World Library - Literary Society An Inland Voyage
£9.76
1st World Library - Literary Society Memories and Portraits
£10.31
£19.56
University of Tampa Press H.P. Lovecraft: A Comprehensive Bibliography
£22.32
Parlor Press Kenneth Burke and His Circles
£24.51
Hippocampus Press I Am Providence: The Life and Times of H. P. Lovecraft, Volume 1
£28.50
Hippocampus Press I Am Providence: The Life and Times of H. P. Lovecraft, Volume 2
£28.50
Hippocampus Press H. P. Lovecraft in the Merrimack Valley
£20.00
£23.75
Hippocampus Press Letters to Hyman Bradofsky and Others
£28.50
SMK Books Confessions of an English Opium-Eater
£11.64
Counterpoint The Year Of Living Virtuously: Weekends Off
£14.39
University of Tennessee Press Thomas Wolfe: When Do the Atrocities Begin?
Book SynopsisIn 1937, after years of living alone in New York City, a manic-depressive Thomas Wolfe returned to his family and his native Asheville, North Carolina, a city he had both ridiculed and brought notoriety to through his novel, Look Homeward, Angel, eight years earlier. Concerned about lingering resentment from the community over the literary work and his tenuous relationship with his family members, Wolfe returned to his hometown with caution, but also with the need to both rejuvenate and compile material for his next novel. It is this visit that sparks Wolfe's trademark conclusion, ""You can't go home again."" During 1937 and 1938, Thomas Wolfe experienced extreme highs and lows as he labored furiously to produce his next work. Joanne Marshall Mauldin provides an in-depth look at those final two years in the life of the brilliant, yet troubled writer in Thomas Wolfe: When Do the Atrocities Begin?By adding new information and insight, Mauldin challenges much of the existing biographical material on the writer and offers a fresh view on the final years of his life. Through the utilization of primary and secondary sources including letters, interviews, recordings, and newspaper clippings, Mauldin offers a candid account of the life of Thomas Wolfe from the time of his visit to North Carolina in 1937 until his untimely death in 1938. Mauldin chronicles details of Wolfe's shocking change in publishers and his complex relationships with his editors, family, friends, and his mistress. This examination goes beyond Wolfe's life and extends into the period after his death, revealing details about the reaction of family and friends to the passing of this literary legend, as well as the cavalier publishing practices of his posthumous editors.Mauldin's narrative is unique from other biographical accounts of Thomas Wolfe in that it focuses solely on the final years in the life of the author. Her unbiased approach enables the reader to draw his or her own conclusions about Wolfe and his actions and state of mind during these last two years of his life.
£29.66
University of Tennessee Press Rufus: James Agee in Tennessee
Book SynopsisOne of the most gifted of America’s writers, James Rufus Agee (1909–1955), spent a third of his short life in Tennessee, yet no biographical treatment until this one has so fully explored his roots in the state. In Rufus, Paul F. Brown draws deeply on a trove of journals, letters, interviews, and contemporaneous newspaper accounts, to produce a captivating portrait of Agee’s boyhood.Brown meticulously delineates Agee’s family history, his earliest years as a sensitive child growing up in Knoxville’s Fort Sanders neighborhood, and the traumatic event that marked his sixth year: his father’s death in an automobile accident. Young Rufus—as his family always called him—revered his father and would use his memories of the tragedy to create his most enduring work of fiction, the Pulitzer Prize–winning A Death in the Family. Just a few years after his father was killed, Agee’s mother placed him in the St. Andrew’s School for Mountain Boys near Sewanee, Tennessee, where he would meet his mentor and lifelong friend, Father James Flye; these experiences would inspire Agee’s poignant novella, The Morning Watch. Another year in Knoxville followed, and then his mother, newly remarried, whisked him away to New England, where he would complete his education at Phillips Exeter Academy and Harvard.Brown’s account deftly reconstructs various settings the young Agee encountered—including not only turn-of-the-century Knoxville and St. Andrew’s but also the mountain hamlet of LaFollette, his father’s hometown—and the complex family relationships that swirled around the young writer-to-be. Brown also explores Knoxville’s belated discovery of its famous son, initiated when Hollywood came to town in 1962 to film All the Way Home, an adaptation of A Death in the Family. Notable commemorations—including academic seminars, a public park, and a street named in Agee’s honor—would come later as the writer’s posthumous reputation bloomed. And now, with Rufus, we have the definitive account of how it all began.
£36.05
Vernon Press Elizabeth Craven: Writer, Feminist and European
£64.05
Vernon Press Elizabeth Craven: Writer, Feminist and European
£48.30
Strategic Book Publishing An Incompatible Passion: A Play in 3 Acts
£12.90
Golgotha Press, Inc. Brontë: A Biography of the Literary Family
£9.37
Murphy & Moore Publishing August Wilhelm Schlegel: A Biography (Volume 1)
Book Synopsis
£112.99
Murphy & Moore Publishing August Wilhelm Schlegel: A Biography (Volume 2)
Book Synopsis
£128.30
Counter-Currents Publishing Forever and Ever: Devotional Poems
£13.00
Seven Stories Press A Man Without a Country
£27.75
Rare Bird Books On the Road with On the Road
Book SynopsisA photographic accompaniment to On the Road by Jack Kerouac.Carl M. Moore was itching to go on a photographic road trip. He decided to go on the road with On the Road. To see things Jack Kerouac saw and to try and capture images that compliment his metaphorical vision. Trips to Denver, New Orleans, San Francisco, and a car road trip with his son from Santa Fe to New England, along with a few existing images in his photo archive, provide the photos in the book.
£38.69
BLACK EAGLE BOOKS Mahanatakara Mahanayaka
£16.98
Cosimo Classics The Life of Charles Dickens, Volume I: 1812-1847
£21.53
£38.99
Cosimo Classics The People of the Abyss: Originally Illustrated
£17.58
Vernon Press Concepción Gimeno de Flaquer (1850-1919): Her Personal Letters, Short Stories, and Journalism
£65.00
Independently Published The Exacerbation of Being Nothing: Wanted for Love Paperized Because Wanted
£11.54
Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp The Bookstore Book
£14.25
£12.40
Culicidae Press, LLC Oh. Im a Widow
£19.94
Culicidae Press, LLC Oh. Im a Widow
£13.29
Independently Published The Most Terrible Time in My Life...Ends Thursday
£8.45
Independently Published Voltaire: A Life from Beginning to End
£12.39