Telling Lives, the Biographer's ArtUniversity of Pennsylvania Press, 1981 - 151 páginas Seven of the most honored biographers of our time--Pulizer Prize winners Justin Kaplan and Barbara Tuchman, National Book Award recipient Theodore Rosengarten, and esteemed literary critics Leon Edel, Dorris Kearns, Geoffrey Wolff, and Alfred Kazin--examine the joys, limitations, and challenges of defining a life. For the very first time, biographers interpret the art of biography. |
Contenido
An Introduction | 2 |
Alfred Kazin | 74 |
Theodore Rosengarten | 104 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Adams ALFRED KAZIN American angle of vision archives artist asked autobiography became become began biographer's biography Black Sun Boswell called century character Cobb Coucy creative critic Crosby's death Duke of Deception Emerson essays experience facts fascinating father feel felt field friends Geoffrey Wolff Harry Crosby Harvard Hemingway Henry James historian Holmes human imagination inner interest Justin Kaplan Kennedy kind knew learned Leaves of Grass Leon Edel letters listening literary Lyndon Johnson Lytton Strachey Mark Twain means memoirs mind myth narrative National Portrait Gallery Ned's never one's Oral history Paris phrenology poems poet political President prism question reader Rex Stout seemed sense shape story T.S. Eliot talk tape recorder TELLING LIVES THEODORE ROSENGARTEN things Thoreau told truth Tuchman turn University Walden Walt Whitman wanted Washington Wilbur words write written wrote