New England Writers and WritingUniversity Press of New England, 1996 - 313 Seiten For more than half a century, Malcolm Cowley (1898-1989) cast a long shadow across the landscape of American literary criticism, forming our views of luminaries like Fitzgerald, Faulkner, and Hemingway and enhancing our understanding of dozens of others. A transplanted but long-time New Englander, Cowley focused much of his critical attention on the region's plethora of eminent authors, and this collection combines those essays with his writings about the New England he knew and loved. Cowley is equally at home with Hawthorne, James, Emerson, Melville, Frost, Aiken, Cheever, Cummings - and the characters and customs of his adoptive region. In a poem included here, Cowley writes of his wish to love the earth and to speak some words in patterns that will be remembered. This book is testimony to his gift for - and fulfillment of - both. |
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Seite 62
... usually sexual , usually familiar aberrations that they conceal . Philip Young tries to avoid those faults , and most often succeeds ( though he has little of interest to say about Sister Ebe , an essential figure in his story ) . One ...
... usually sexual , usually familiar aberrations that they conceal . Philip Young tries to avoid those faults , and most often succeeds ( though he has little of interest to say about Sister Ebe , an essential figure in his story ) . One ...
Seite 145
... usually ended by doing with a new friend ; or he had told someone else who passed the news along . I regarded it as an item of personal gossip , as if I had been told that he had a birthmark on his back or suffered - as he did - from ...
... usually ended by doing with a new friend ; or he had told someone else who passed the news along . I regarded it as an item of personal gossip , as if I had been told that he had a birthmark on his back or suffered - as he did - from ...
Seite 223
... usually contemptuous of pol- iticians . Aiken , for example , says of himself in Ushant : “ ... he had never found it possible to take more than a casual and superficial interest in prac- tical politics , viewing it , as he did , as ...
... usually contemptuous of pol- iticians . Aiken , for example , says of himself in Ushant : “ ... he had never found it possible to take more than a casual and superficial interest in prac- tical politics , viewing it , as he did , as ...
Inhalt
Hawthorne in Solitude 3 The Hawthornes in Paradise | 28 |
The External Emerson | 63 |
The Poet and the Mask excerpts 73 The Buried | 83 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
admired Aiken Alger Amy Lowell appeared become Blithedale Romance Boston Brooks Brooks's called career character Cheever cider Connecticut Conrad Aiken copies Cowley Cowley's critics Cummings Dimmesdale E. E. Cummings early edition Emerson England F. O. Matthiessen farmers farms father feel fiction Foster Foster Damon friends Frost Hart Hart Crane Harvard Hawthorne Hawthorne's Henry James hero Hester John John Cheever land later learned literary living look Malcolm Cowley melons Melville Moby Dick mother never notebook novel novelist once person play poems poet poetry political published remember revealed Salem Santayana says Scarlet Letter seems sense Sherman sister sometimes Sophia Sophia Peabody sort story summer talked tells THEE things thought told Tory Hill town tradition valley voice Whitman Wilder words writing written wrote York young
Verweise auf dieses Buch
The Teachers & Writers Guide to Classic American Literature Christopher Edgar,Gary Lenhart Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2001 |