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This unique collection of lectures honors the pioneering work in Byron studies of Leslie Alexis Marchand, who has had an enduring influence on the appreciation and study of Lord Byron for sixty years. Generations of readers and writers have come to Byron through his biographies and his edition of the poet's letters and journals. All admirers of Byron respond to the verve, dash, and immediacy of his correspondence, which lies at the heart of Marchand's biographies and offers us a portrait based on the poet's views of himself and his times. No one has so powerfully and judiciously allowed Byron's life to emerge from the testimony of his letters. Many readers, from his contemporaries to our day, have refused to separate the poet from his troubled dark heroes, and see little but strands of autobiography in the poems. But the letters and journals reveal him in a very different light. Leslie Marchand provided these documents for the first time in their unexpurgated and authoritative form. This collection pays tribute to Marchand's careful scholarship and scrupulous attention to the limits of interpretation. Marchand's continued relevance to Byron studies derives in part from the work undertaken by those inspired by his labors as editor and interpreter; many of whom are represented in this collection. Three opening essays bear personal witness to his fervent support for young scholars, his depth of expertise and appeal as a teacher, and his commitment to encouraging others to join him on his Byron pilgrimage. The lectures themselves represent such diverse disciplines as literary theory, psychiatry, publishing history, comparative literature, drama, political history, revolutionary politics in literature and music, literary criticism, textual editing and selection, and literary influence. A chronology and a bibliography provide an overview of his life and scholarship.
Heathen Valley, Romulus Linney's haunting and original novel, was
born from the church histories of the Valle Crucis mission in
western North Carolina. Told in four parts, it is a story set in an
almost unknown valley, "Heathen, a valley That Forgot God." With a
quiet, muscular violence and biblical grace that readers of Cormac
McCarthy will recognize, Linney takes us into the 1850s, where an
idealistic Bishop from New England and a life-whipped, sorrowful
transient named Starns, struggle to win souls and transform the
valley. Widely reviewed when it was first published in 1962 and
selected as an alternate for the Book of the Month Club, Romulus
Linney's first novel Heathen Valley was never reprinted and has
never before been in paperback.
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