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The Green Paradise, v. 1: 1900-16 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R463
Discovery Miles 4 630
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The Green Paradise, v. 1: 1900-16 (Hardcover)
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Loot Price R463
Discovery Miles 4 630
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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More confessional than chronicle, this first volume of the noted
expatriate writer's autobiography candidly records the responses of
an intense sensibility to a growing self. Writing "to rediscover
the driving force which dominated my life," Green (Paris, 1991,
etc.) examines his first 16 years - which from the onslaught of
adolescence were to he dominated by the tension between his
emerging homosexuality and his deeply felt religious convictions.
Born in 1900, Green was the youngest child of an American family
living in Paris. Their home - though they moved through a series of
lodgings whose varying quality reflected changing family fortunes -
was an oasis of southern American culture and sentiment, with the
South's defeat in the Civil War a persistent source of family
identity. Green's earliest memories are of himself as a dreamy
child who enjoyed reading and drawing, and whose great happiness
was mixed with vivid fears prompted by an overly sensitive
imagination that conjured up a world populated as much by lurking
demons as by benevolent angels. Green's mother, a religious woman
of strong emotions whom the author thinks loved him too much,
impressed on the boy the need to be "pure" - an admonition that, as
Green entered adolescence, created intense moral dilemmas, pitting
his sexual innocence against his attraction to other boys. This
parent died in 1914, during the early days of WW I, an event that
created a "dreadful solitude" in Green's life and probably
accelerated his conversion to Roman Catholicism at age 16. The
volume ends as the author, 17, prepares to become an ambulance
driver at the front because his father says that it's "time to
think of doing something for the common cause." Though perhaps
Green examines his life too strenuously, his honesty and palpable
faith make this a moving account of what he calls "God's
progression in the human heart." (Kirkus Reviews)
The author, born to American parents living in Paris, recounts his
life and the influences on his writing.
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