Marguerite Young, Our Darling: Tributes and EssaysMiriam Fuchs Dalkey Archive Press, 1994 - 143 páginas With Miss MacIntosh, My Darling (1965) Marguerite Young established herself as one of the greatest writers of our time, and yet she has been slow to attract critical attention. Miriam Fuchs remedies that defect with the first book-length study of her work, a gathering of personal reminiscences and appreciative essays that explore the breadth of Young's achievement. Part 1 consists of tributes and recollections by such writers as Anne Tyler, Amy Clampitt, Stanley Kunitz, Anna Balakian, among other friends and students. Part 2 offers a dozen critical essays on her work, from Angel in the Forest to Young's forthcoming biography of Eugene Debs, with special attention to the wonders of Miss MacIntosh, My Darling. Part 3 consists of two interviews with Young. Also included are a dozen photos, most published here for the first time, and a chronology by Martha J. Sattler. |
Índice
Tributes and Recollections | 3 |
Anna Balakian Marguerite Young Innovator 3 Amy Clampitt Out | 44 |
Miriam Fuchs | 50 |
Lillian S Robinson | 66 |
Peter G Christensen | 73 |
Erika Duncan | 85 |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
American Amy Clampitt Anaïs Nin Angel beautiful beginning biography Bonebreaker Cartwheel Catherine characters Charles Ruas Cixous Cousin Hannah create critics cultural Darling dead death Djuna Barnes dream Ellen G epic essays Esther Longtree Eugene Debs Eugene Victor Debs experience exploration fact feminine fiction Forest Gertrude Stein Greenwich Village guerite Harmony heart human illusion images imaginary imagination Indiana Intosh James Whitcomb Riley knew language literary literature lives lost magical metaphysic Marguerite Young Marguerite Young's Miss Marguerite's Mari Sandoz Midwest Miriam Fuchs Miss Mac Miss MacIntosh Moderate Fable mother multiple narrative never obsession Opium Lady Owen Peter Marchant poems poetic poetry pregnant Prismatic Ground prose published quest Rapp Rappite reader reality Review Ruth seems sense social Spitzer stone-deaf story thing tion traditional University utopia Vera's vision voice William James woman women words writing York Young's Miss MacIntosh Young's novel