Product Details
American Fictions

American Fictions
By Elizabeth Hardwick

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Product Description

"Just as Edwin Denby, Clement Greenburg, and Pauline Kael transformed the nature of criticism in the fields of dance, art, and film, respectively, Hardwick has redefined the possibilities of the literary essay."
--The New Yorker

A brilliant tour of a century American writers, from the novels of Melville, Wharton and James to the fictions of Margaret Fuller, Sylvia Plath and Norman Mailer.  Twenty-five years ago, Elizabeth Hardwick's now classic essay "Seduction and Betrayal" helped  pioneer the study of women in fiction, both as writers and as characters.  American Fictions gathers fro the first time Hardwick's portraits of America's greatest writers.  Many of these pieces double as individual reminiscences about close friends, including Mary McCarthy, Katherine Anne Porter and Edmund Wilson.  Hardwick has achieved a permanent place in American letters for her sharp and elegant style.  Her essays are themselves a work of literature.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #858049 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-11-02
  • Released on: 1999-11-02
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 1.10 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 384 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
"The landscapes of fiction: houses and the things therein, nation-states and states of the union, oceans, backland; winter nights and the old horse pulling the sledge through a driving snow, summer heat and the arrival of smothering love affairs," Hardwick writes in her introduction, indicating not only her wide-ranging definition of the concept of landscape but also the proud lyricism with which she analyzes many of America's greatest writers. Divided into eight sections, this collection of essays opens with discussions of Melville and Edith Wharton and ends with thoughts on Truman Capote and Norman Mailer. Between the bookends, Hardwick casts her deft eye on, among others, Nabokov, whose "novels very often end, and no matter what the plot, in a rhapsodic call to literature itself," and Katherine Anne Porter, who, "did not always conduct herself with generosity or moral refinement." Part of what makes these essays so engaging is their mix of biography and criticism, and the freedom with which Hardwick moves between the two. She often intertwines elegant intellectual arguments with details of her subjects' lives, as with Sylvia Plath ("both heroine and author; when the curtain goes down, it is her own dead body there on the stage, sacrificed to her plot"). The ultimate achievement of this energetic book is that Hardwick's smart, eloquent discussions of important works of American fiction bear little resemblance to the normally arid field of literary criticism. Indeed, these fine essays are often as satisfying as the works and authors inspiring them. (Dec.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Award-winning critic and novelist Hardwick has been one of the more important voices in American letters for half a century. This new edition of her work gathers a selection of her previously published critical essays (mostly from now unavailable collections) on American writers and poets from Herman Melville and Edith Wharton to Eugene O'Neill and Elizabeth Bishop to Joan Didion and Richard Ford. Clustered loosely around geographical locations (old New York, the prairie) or themes ("Victims and Victors"), the essays combine literary criticism with biography in astute, informative, and engaging narratives. The collection as a whole will serve as an introduction to American literature of the last century and bring Hardwick's elegant criticism to a new generation of students and readers. Recommended for public and academic libraries.AJulia Burch, MIT Media Lab, Cambridge, MA
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
"Funny, sly, serious and refreshing. . . .Her intelligence, wit and urgency bubble out of every erudite sentence. . . .She is like a brilliant friend."
--The Hartford Courant

"A sophisticated and subtle tour through some of our country's greatest fictional landscapes . . . a deeply thoughtful pleasure."
--San Diego Union Tribune

"Among twentieth-century literary essayists, only Virginia Woolf has created  comparable likenesses."
--Joyce Carol Oates

"Elizabeth Hardwick is our most original, brilliant and amusing critic.  Many of these essays are already classics for their insight and style."
--Diane Johnson

"Hardwick has a gift for coming up with descriptions so thoughtfully selected, so exactly right, that they strike the reader as inevitable."
--Anne Tyler

"Literature, history, social criticism, and an original and cryptically brilliant intelligence meet in this engrossing--and permanent--collection."
--Cynthia Ozick