Uncollected Early Prose of Katherine Anne Porter

Uncollected Early Prose of Katherine Anne Porter

Author: Katherine Anne Porter

Publisher: University of Texas Press

Published: 1993-01-01

Total Pages: 300

ISBN-13: 9780292765443

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This volume brings together 29 pieces dating from before 1932, none of which appear in her collected works and many of which are published here for the first time. Includes both fiction and essays.


Letters of Katherine Anne Porter

Letters of Katherine Anne Porter

Author: Katherine Anne Porter

Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Press

Published: 1994-02

Total Pages: 722

ISBN-13: 9780871134530

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Selected letters between Porter and fellow writers trace her development as a writer and reveal her outlook on life.


Selected Letters of Katherine Anne Porter

Selected Letters of Katherine Anne Porter

Author: Darlene Harbour Unrue

Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi

Published: 2012-11-28

Total Pages: 412

ISBN-13: 1626744475

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Katherine Anne Porter (1890–1980) produced a relatively small body of fiction, but she wrote thousands and thousands of letters. The present selection of 135 unexpurgated letters, written to seventy-four different persons, begins with a 1916 letter written from a tuberculosis sanatorium in Texas and ends with a 1979 letter dictated to an unnamed nursing-home attendant in Maryland. Different from any previous selection, this body of letters does not omit Porter's frank criticism of fellow writers and spans her entire life. Within that circumscription is the chronicle of Porter, a twentieth-century woman searching for love while she struggles to become the writer who she is sure she can be. Porter's letters vividly showcase the twentieth century as the writer observes it from her historical vantage points—tuberculosis sanatoria and the influenza pandemic of 1918; the leftist community in Greenwich Village in the 1920s; the Mexican cultural revolution of the 1920s and early 1930s; the expatriate community in Paris in the 1930s; the rise of Nazism in Europe between the World Wars; the Second World War and its concomitant suppression of civil liberties; Hollywood and the university circuit as a haven for financially strapped writers in the 1940s and 1950s; the Cold War and its competition for supremacy in space; the women's rights and the civil rights movements; and the evolution and demise of literary modernism.


Katherine Anne Porter

Katherine Anne Porter

Author: Darlene Harbour Unrue

Publisher: Taylor & Francis US

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 448

ISBN-13: 9781578067770

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This biography captures the incomparable life and times of one of America's finest writers, a Pulitzer-winning author of 27 stories and short novels and one long novel, all acclaimed for their crystalline prose and incisive probing of the human condition.


Ship of Fools

Ship of Fools

Author: Katherine Anne Porter

Publisher: Open Road Media

Published: 2015-04-28

Total Pages: 453

ISBN-13: 1504003535

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This “dazzling” National Book Award finalist set aboard an ocean liner in 1931 reflects the passions and prejudices that sparked World War II (San Francisco Chronicle). August 1931. An ocean liner bound for Germany sets out from the Mexican port city of Veracruz. The ship’s first-class passengers include an idealistic young American painter and her lover; a Spanish dance troupe with a sideline in larceny; an elderly German couple and their fat, seasick bulldog; and a boisterous band of Cuban medical students. As the Vera journeys across the Atlantic, the incidents and intrigues of several dozen passengers and crew members come into razor-sharp focus. The result is a richly drawn portrait of the human condition in all its complexity and a mesmerizing snapshot of a world drifting toward disaster. Written over a span of twenty years and based on the diary Katherine Anne Porter kept during a similar ocean voyage, Ship of Fools was the bestselling novel of 1962 and the inspiration for an Academy Award–winning film starring Vivien Leigh. It is a masterpiece of American literature as captivating today as when it was first published more than a half century ago. This ebook features an illustrated biography of Katherine Anne Porter, including rare photos from the University of Maryland Libraries.


Katherine Anne Porter

Katherine Anne Porter

Author: Janis P. Stout

Publisher: University of Virginia Press

Published: 1995

Total Pages: 432

ISBN-13: 9780813915685

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Katherine Anne Porter's life closely paralleled that of her century not only in its span (1890-1980) but in its interests and contradictions. A communist sympathizer who became a quasi fascist; a cosmopolitan who embraced southern agrarianism, a femme fatale whose writings nonetheless evince feminist feeling, Porter embodied, often at their extremes, the major currents of her time and ours. In this new biography Janis P. Stout argues that these inconsistencies can be viewed as part and parcel of modernism itself. Drawing on Porter's rich and voluminous correspondence as well as published works, Stout here sets out to craft an intellectual biography of a woman who, by her own admission, was "not really an intellectual". Stout reveals the extent of Porter's involvement in events of public significance and her interactions with prominent figures, from President Alvaro Obregon of Mexico in 1920 to Hermann Goering in Berlin in 1931, to Robert Penn Warren, Eudora Welty, Allen Tate, and others in the 1930s and 1940s, to members of the Lyndon Johnson White House in the 1960s. Against the backdrop of world war and cold war, Porter's conflicting views on politics, race, religion, and feminism reflected Porter's ambivalence toward her own Texas roots.


Katherine Anne Porter and Texas

Katherine Anne Porter and Texas

Author: Clinton Machann

Publisher: Texas A&M University Press

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 228

ISBN-13: 9780890964415

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"A Texas bibliography of Katherine Anne Porter" : p. [124]-182.


Truth and Vision in Katherine Anne Porter's Fiction

Truth and Vision in Katherine Anne Porter's Fiction

Author: Darlene Harbour Unrue

Publisher: University of Georgia Press

Published: 2008-12-01

Total Pages: 286

ISBN-13: 0820333549

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My stories are fragments of a larger plan, Katherine Anne Porter once wrote. And on another occasion she praised a critic who perceived that all her work, from the very beginning, was part of an "unbroken progression, all related." In Truth and Vision in Katherine Anne Porter's Fiction, Darlene Unrue examines the encompassing themes that underlie Porter's shorter fiction and that combined to create the haunting events of her complex metaphorical novel, Ship of Fools. Porter believed that men and women are compelled toward discovering the truth about their existence, but that the nature of our world makes those truths difficult to discern. In her writing, Unrue finds, Porter explored not only this basic human need to confront the truth, but also the bewilderment and suffering that are so often the results of failing to fulfill that need. Often in Porter's fiction the movement toward truth is obstructed by the hollow beliefs and illusions that abound in the world--by the seductions of ideology and dogmatic religion, by romantic love or the vision of a golden past. Clinging to such illusions, using them to lend a false coherence to their lives, Porter's characters are led away from the hard realization that truth requires accepting the existence of the unknowable at the center of life, and that what is knowable lies within themselves. Drawing on essays, reviews, letters, and notes, as well as on the intricate fabric of the fiction, this study traces Porter's pursuit of the truth through the creation of a body of fiction in which, from fragments of life, she could assemble an honest vision of the world.


The Old Order

The Old Order

Author: Katherine Anne Porter

Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

Published: 1969

Total Pages: 184

ISBN-13: 9780156685191

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