The Biographical Dictionary of Literary Failure

The Biographical Dictionary of Literary Failure

Author: C. D. Rose

Publisher: Melville House

Published: 2014-11-04

Total Pages: 194

ISBN-13: 161219379X

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A darkly comic, satirical reference book about writers who never made it into the literary canon A signal event of literary scholarship, The Biographical Dictionary of Literary Failure compiles the biographies of history’s most notable cases of a complete lack of literary success. As such, it is the world’s leading authority on the subject. Compiled in one volume by C. D. Rose, a well-educated person universally acknowledged in parts of England as the world’s pre-eminent expert on inexpert writers, the book culls its information from lost or otherwise ignored archives scattered around the globe, as well as the occasional dustbin. The dictionary amounts to a monumental accomplishment: the definitive appreciation of history’s least accomplished writers. Thus immortalized beyond deserving and rescued from hard-earned obscurity, the authors presented in this historic volume comprise a who’s who of the talentless and deluded, their stories timeless litanies of abject psychosis, misapplication, and delinquency. It is, in short, a treasure.


Orientalist Writers

Orientalist Writers

Author: Coeli Fitzpatrick

Publisher: Dictionary of Literary Biograp

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780787681845

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This volume provides background material for the debate initiated by the publication of the late Edward W. Said's Orientalism (1978), in which Said contended that the scholarly study of Eastern society is not value-neutral.


Concise Dictionary of American Literary Biography

Concise Dictionary of American Literary Biography

Author: Matthew Joseph Bruccoli

Publisher: Gale / Cengage Learning

Published: 1987-04-15

Total Pages: 2506

ISBN-13: 9780810318182

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Annotation Covers only the American authors most frequently studied in high school and college literature courses. Each volume is devoted to a single historical period, covering 30-40 representative writers from all genres. The supplement to the 6-vol. Concise Dictionary of American Literary Biography, Modern American Writers, provides additional information on 20th-century authors featured in the original volumes.


Shirley Jackson

Shirley Jackson

Author: Bernice M. Murphy

Publisher: McFarland

Published: 2005-10-05

Total Pages: 305

ISBN-13: 0786423129

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Shirley Jackson was one of America's most prominent female writers of the 1950s. Between 1948 and 1965 she published six novels, one best-selling story collection, two popular volumes of her family chronicles and many stories, which ranged from fairly conventional tales for the women's magazine market to the ambiguous, allusive, delicately sinister and more obviously literary stories that were closest to Jackson's heart and destined to end up in the more highbrow end of the market. Most critical discussions of Jackson tend to focus on "The Lottery" and The Haunting of Hill House. An author of such accomplishment--and one so fully engaged with the pressures and preoccupations of postwar America--merits fuller discussion. To that end, this collection of essays widens the scope of Jackson scholarship with new writing on such works as The Road through the Wall and We Have Always Lived in the Castle, and topics ranging from Jackson's domestic fiction to ethics, cosmology, and eschatology. The book also makes newly available some of the most significant Jackson scholarship published in the last two decades.


Jewish American Literature

Jewish American Literature

Author: Jules Chametzky

Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 1264

ISBN-13: 9780393048094

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A collection of Jewish-American literature written by various authors between 1656 and 1990.


Graham R.

Graham R.

Author: Linda K. Hughes

Publisher: Ohio University Press

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 424

ISBN-13: 0821416294

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Rosamund Marriott Watson was a gifted poet, an erudite literary and art critic, and a daring beauty whose life illuminates fin-de-siècle London and the way in which literary reputations are made--and lost. A participant in aestheticism and decadence, she wrote six volumes of poems noted for their subtle cadence, diction, and uncanny effects. Linda K. Hughes unfolds a complex life in Graham R.: Rosamund Marriott Watson, Woman of Letters, tracing the poet's development from accomplished ballads and sonnets, to avant-garde urban impressionism and New Woman poetry, to her anticipation of literary modernism. Despite an early first divorce, she won fame writing under a pseudonym, Graham R. Tomson. The influential Andrew Lang announced the arrival of a new poet he assumed to be a man. She was soon hosting a salon attended by Lang, Oscar Wilde, and other 1890s notables. Publishing to widespread praise as Graham R., she exemplified the complex cultural politics of her era. A woman with a man's name and a scandalous past, she was also a graceful beauty who captivated Thomas Hardy and left an impression on his work. At the height of her success she fell in love with writer H. B. Marriott Watson and dared a second divorce. Graham R. combines the stories of a gifted poet, of London literary networks in the 1890s, and of a bold woman whose achievements and scandals turned on her unusual history of marriage and divorce. Her literary history and her uncommon experience reveal the limits and opportunities faced by an unconventional, ambitious, and talented woman at the turn of the century.