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Book : Shirley Hazzard A Writing Life - Olubas, Brigitta

Modelo 74113378
Fabricante o sello Farrar, Straus And Giroux
Peso 0.86 Kg.
Precio:   $54,749.00
Si compra hoy, este producto se despachara y/o entregara entre el 13-05-2025 y el 21-05-2025
Descripción
-Titulo Original : Shirley Hazzard A Writing Life

-Fabricante :

Farrar, Straus And Giroux

-Descripcion Original:

About the Author Brigitta Olubas is a professor of English at the University of New South Wales, Sydney. She published the first scholarly monograph of Shirley Hazzard’s writing and recently edited two volumes of Shirley Hazzards work: We Need Silence to Find Out What We Think: Selected Essays and Collected Stories. The first biography of Shirley Hazzard, the author of The Transit of Venus and a writer of “shocking wisdom” and “intellectual thrill” (The New Yorker). Shirley Hazzard: A Writing Life tells the extraordinary story of a great modern novelist. Brigitta Olubas, Hazzard’s authorized biographer, has drawn, with great subtlety and understanding, on her fiction (itself largely based on Hazzard’s own experience); on an extensive archive of letters, diaries, and notebooks; and on the memories of surviving friends and colleagues to create this resonant portrait of an exceptional woman. This biography explores the distinctive times of Hazzard’s life, from her youth and middle age to her widowhood and years of decline, and traces the complex and intricate processes of self-fashioning that lay beneath Hazzard’s formidable, beguiling presence. Olubas shows us the places of Hazzard’s life, of which she wrote with characteristic lyricism: her childhood in Depression-era Sydney; her youth in postwar Hong Kong, New Zealand, and London; her years in New York in the 1950s, working at the United Nations and The New Yorker. Olubas also describes Hazzard’s long marriage to the writer Francis Steegmuller and their deep involvement in postwar Naples and Capri. Rare photographs from Hazzard’s collection and elsewhere accompany the text. Hazzard was the last of a generation of selftaught writers, devotees of a great literary tradition, and her depth of perception and expressive gifts have earned her iconic status. Brigitta Olubas has brought her brilliantly alive, enhancing and deepening our understanding of the singular woman who created some of the most enduring fiction of the past sixty years. As Dwight Garner wrote in The New York Times, “Hazzard’s stories feel timeless because she understands, as she writes in one of them: ‘We are human beings, not rational ones.’” Here, in Shirley Hazzard, is the story of a remarkable human being. Review An illuminating portrait . . . In this scrupulously researched biography, Olubas . . . charts the meandering course of Hazzard’s life and travels, drawing on events and impressions that would inform much of her writing . . . Throughout, Olubas offers a discerning, cleareyed perspective of Hazzard’s complex character and a persuasive appraisal of what distinguishes her work. An absorbing, well-crafted profile of a supremely gifted writer. Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review) Meticulously crafted . . . Olubas’s biography is more than just a map of the author’s movements . . . It’s an account, as she puts it, of a writer in the process of making herself, chronicling how geographic, political, and psychic influences coalesce in a refined deeply insightful perspective . . . This new account of [Hazzards] life should confirm her as one of the 20th century’s greatest novelists. Chloe Schama, Vogue Olubas constructs a fascinating portrait of Hazzard’s early life in Australia, and throughout she weaves in astute suggestions of biographical experiences that influenced Hazzard’s fiction . . . An impressive, revealing, and worthy biography of one of the most important writers of the last century.” Alexander Moran, Booklist Shirley Hazzard’s life reads like something out of a Shirley Hazzard novel- precise, unique, lyrical and always riveting. What Brigitta Olubas has done for one of the 20th centurys great prose stylists feels akin to what Ellmann did for Joyce, or Nabokov for Gogol. If there is such thing as a perfect literary biography, this is it. Daniel Torday, author of Boomer1 About one of her heroines Shirley Hazzard writes: To have known her was to understand
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