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Richard Elman
其他書名
Mostly Literary Memoirs
出版
SUNY Press
, 1998-01-01
主題
Literary Collections / Essays
Biography & Autobiography / Literary Figures
Biography & Autobiography / Historical
Biography & Autobiography / Editors, Journalists, Publishers
ISBN
0791438805
9780791438800
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=vvazWrrbMp0C&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
In the course of the same old race I find myself writing about knowing some peoplehow fame seems to set some people apart from us, once known: I was astonished by Ernest Hemingways small, weak handshake when we were introduced at Scribners by John Hall Wheelock and by the jolt of force with which Elie Wiesel squeezed my hand.
How long ago seems knowing, too: when I first meet Isaac Singer he asks me, Who is Mr. Saul Bellow?
Were on the Upper West Side in his apartment next to the funeral parlor. A yellow parakeet hops around on Singers bald forehead. Singers great comic story of faith, Gimpel the Fool, has only recently been published from Yiddish into English in a translation by Saul Bellow. Theyre both still a long way from Stockholm.
Do you know him? Can you tell me who this Mr. Bellow is? he asks. It was not always possible to guess Singers motives in acting as though he was not impressed with worldly reputations. His features of a medieval Polish saint, even to a faint white-haired tonsure effect around the crown of his skull, were backlit by the glowing monitor from his mischievous incubus.from the Preface
These are Richard Elmans candid snapshots in prose of the various, mostly literary celebrities he encountered during his four decades as a working writer and journalistamong them Isaac Bashevis Singer, Tillie Olsen, Bernard Malamud, Faye Dunaway, Hunter S. Thompson, and other important artists and writers who were Elmans teachers and, occasionally, adversaries. Engagingly written and never superficial, these portraits and anecdotes in many cases strike to the center of each subjects art. To many readers, these persons are just names; Elman brings them to life while never simplifying or overdramatizing their work.