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More Conversations with Eudora Welty (Paperback, New)
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More Conversations with Eudora Welty (Paperback, New)
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This book of conversations with one of America's most revered
writers extends the firsthand account of Eudora Welty's life and
work from the early 1980s to the present and supplements
Conversations with Eudora Welty, which novelist Anne Tyler said
brought her "pure pleasure." These interviews include many that
refer to Welty's memoir, One Writer's Beginnings, and greatly
amplify the picture of her personal life that emerged from the
earlier collection of interviews. She reminisces here about her
parents, her childhood and schooldays in Jackson, Mississippi, and
her sojourns in New York City. She speaks of gardening, travel,
friends, and writers--both of contemporaries she had known as
friends or associates and those she has never met, except through
their books. One whose presence and influence she never fails to
mention in conversations about admired predecessors is Anton
Chekov. Others whose names recur frequently in these interviews are
her friends Katherine Anne Porter and Elizabeth Bowen. Here too
Welty answers questions about her photographic work and about the
photographic images she recorded in the 1930s. With her
interviewers, she also assesses changes she has witnessed during
her lifetime--changes in the southern landscape, southern society,
southern writing. She talks about her own experiences with aging,
the inevitable loss of friends, and the waning of physical
vitality. She replies to queries about specific characters and
settings in her work--questions about origins, sources, and
real-life counterparts. She reveals some of her compositional
designs in the writing of Losing Battles and The Optimist's
Daughter and discusses the significance of the Delta region as the
setting for The Golden Apples. Her lifetime interest in local
details--names, customs, and tales, such as those that show up in
Mississippi country newspapers and farm journals--has long been
evident in her stories, and her she recalls them with evident
pleasure.
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