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Updike remains both a critical and popular success; however,
because Updike asked that his personal letters not be published the
only way that Updike scholars and fans can read more of the
author's candid and insightful remarks is to revisit some of the
many interviews he granted-most of which are difficult to locate or
obtain. Updike wrote about his home town of Reading in Berks
County, Pennsylvania for much of his adult life, setting most of
his early fiction and all of his award-winning novels in his home
state. In John Updike's Pennsylvania Interviews, James Plath has
compiled the first collection of interviews that illustrates and
helps to explain the bond between one of America's greatest
literary talents and his beloved Pennsylvania. Included in this
volume are interviews and articles by Mark Abrams, Leonard W.
Boasberg, Carl W. Brown, Jr., David Cheshire, Marty Crisp, Sean
Diviny, John Mark Eberhart, William Ecenbarger, Elizabeth
Greenwood, Ruth Heimbuecher, Dorothy Lehman Hoerr, Jim Homan, Tom
Knapp, Karen L. Miller, Steve Neal, Richard E. Nicholls, Sanford
Pinsker, James Plath, Bruce Posten, Carole Reber, Pamela Rohland,
Carlin Romano, Daniel Rubin, Stephan Salisbury, Charles R. Shaw,
Ellen Sulkis, Heather Thomas, Stanley J. Watkins, Michael L.
Wentzel, and Robert F. Zissa.
When Ernest Hemingway won the 1954 Nobel Prize for Literature,
presenters called him "one of this epoch’s great molders of
style,” praising his vivid dialogue and journalistic eye for
"robust details to accumulate and take on momentous
significance.” But even the Swedish Academy could not separate
Hemingway the writer from Hemingway the adventurer. They also cited
his "manly love of danger and adventure, with a natural admiration
for every individual who fights the good fight in a world of
reality overshadowed by violence and death.” From the 1920s until
his death in 1961, "Papa” Hemingway was a larger-than-life
literary figure whose everyday exploits became legendary. He was a
friend of celebrities, a war correspondent, journalist, renowned
big-game hunter, record-setting saltwater angler, and hard-drinking
brawler whose reputation preceded him. Though Hemingway was and
remains an American icon, he was also first and foremost a human
being, as these striking black-and-white photos remind.
Updike remains both a critical and popular success; however,
because Updike asked that his personal letters not be published the
only way that Updike scholars and fans can read more of the
author's candid and insightful remarks is to revisit some of the
many interviews he granted-most of which are difficult to locate or
obtain. Updike wrote about his home town of Reading in Berks
County, Pennsylvania for much of his adult life, setting most of
his early fiction and all of his award-winning novels in his home
state. In John Updike's Pennsylvania Interviews, James Plath has
compiled the first collection of interviews that illustrates and
helps to explain the bond between one of America's greatest
literary talents and his beloved Pennsylvania. Included in this
volume are interviews and articles by Mark Abrams, Leonard W.
Boasberg, Carl W. Brown, Jr., David Cheshire, Marty Crisp, Sean
Diviny, John Mark Eberhart, William Ecenbarger, Elizabeth
Greenwood, Ruth Heimbuecher, Dorothy Lehman Hoerr, Jim Homan, Tom
Knapp, Karen L. Miller, Steve Neal, Richard E. Nicholls, Sanford
Pinsker, James Plath, Bruce Posten, Carole Reber, Pamela Rohland,
Carlin Romano, Daniel Rubin, Stephan Salisbury, Charles R. Shaw,
Ellen Sulkis, Heather Thomas, Stanley J. Watkins, Michael L.
Wentzel, and Robert F. Zissa.
Huckleberry Finn, Anna Karenina, Harry Potter, Hester
Prynne...these are just a handful of remarkable characters to be
found in literature, but of course, the list of memorable
characters is virtually endless! But why ponder which of these
creations are the greatest? More than just a topic to debate with
friends, the greatest characters from fiction help readers
comprehend history, culture, politics, and even their own place in
today's world. Despite our reliance on television, film, and
technology, it is literature's great characters that create and
reinforce popular culture, informing us again and again about
society and ourselves. In The 100 Greatest Literary Characters,
three scholars of literature identify the most significant figures
in fiction published over the last several centuries. From Jay
Gatsby to Jean Valjean, the characters profiled here represent a
wide array of storytelling, and the authors explore each one's
significance at the time they were created as well as their
relevance today. Included in this volume are characters from
literature produced around the world, such as Aladdin, James Bond,
Holden Caulfield, Hercule Poirot, Don Quixote, Lisbeth Salander,
Ebenezer Scrooge, and Yuri Zhivago. Readers of this volume will
find their beloved literary figures, learn about forgotten gems, or
discover deserving choices pulled from history's dustbin. Providing
insights into how literature shapes and molds culture via these
fabricated figures, The 100 Greatest Literary Characters will
appeal to literature lovers around the globe.
New scholarly essays providing a multifaceted approach to the role
of Africa in Hemingway's life and work. Hemingway's two extended
African safaris, the first in the 1930s and the second in the
1950s, gave rise to two of his best-known stories ("The Snows of
Kilimanjaro" and "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber"), a
considerable amount of journalism and correspondence, and two
nonfiction books, Green Hills of Africa (1935), about the first
safari, and True at First Light (1999; longer version, Under
Kilimanjaro 2005), about the second.Africa also figures largely in
his important posthumous novel The Garden of Eden (1986). The
variety and quantity of this literary output indicate clearly that
Africa was a major factor in the creative life of this influential
American author. But surprisingly little scholarship has been
devoted to the role of Africa in Hemingway's life and work. To
start the long-delayed conversation on this topic, this book offers
historical, theoretical, biographical, theological, and literary
interpretations of Hemingway's African narratives. It also presents
a wide-ranging introduction, a detailed chronology of the safaris,
a complete bibliography of Hemingway's published and unpublished
African works, an up-to-date, annotated review of the scholarship
on the African works, and a bibliography of Hemingway's reading on
natural history and other topics relevant to Africa and the world
of the safari. Contributors: Silvio Calabi, Suzanne del Gizzo,
Beatriz Penas Ibanez, Jeremiah M. Kitunda, Kelli A. Larson, Miriam
B. Mandel, Frank Mehring, Philip H. Melling, Erik G. R. Nakjavani,
James Plath, and Chikako Tanimoto. Miriam B. Mandel is retired as
Senior Lecturer in the Department of English and American Studies
at Tel Aviv University.
John Updike says: Any act of description is, to some extent, an act
of praise, so that even when the event is unpleasant or horrifying
or spiritually stunning, the very attempt to describe it is, in
some way, part of that Old Testament injunction to give praise.
Even though my books strike many people as immoral or morally
useless, to me they are really moral investigations of how we live,
and harsh, perhaps, because the standards are otherworldly. There
was a tradition among my peers for frank and open talk, and I'd
always been a rather shy, priggish, unexperienced adolescent. So
maybe my revenge as a young adult was to put down all the dirty
words that I'd always been a little shy about using. James Plath, a
professor of English at Illinois Wesleyan University, is
editor-publisher of "Clockwatch Review" and director of Hemingway
Days Writer's Workshop and Conference in Key West.
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