Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Record 17 of 55
Record:   Prev Next
Resources
More Information
book
BookPrinted Material
Author Meyers, Jeffrey.

Title Edmund Wilson : a biography / Jeffrey Meyers.

Publication Info. Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 1995.

Item Status

Location Call No. Status OPAC Message Public Note Gift Note
 Moore Stacks  PS3545.I6245 Z76 1995    Available  ---
Description xvii, 554 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Note "A Peter Davison book."
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 535-540) and index.
Contents Red bank, 1895-1907 -- The Hill school and Princeton, 1908-1916 -- War, 1916-1919 -- Vanity Fair and Edna St. Vincent Millay, 1919-1921 -- The New Republic and Ted Paramore, 1921-1922 -- Mary Blair, 1923-1926 -- Nervous breakdown, 1927-1929 -- Margaret Canby, 1930-1932 -- Marxism and Russia, 1932-1935 -- Mistresses, 1936-1937 -- Mary McCarthy, 1938-1945 -- Wellfleet, 1940-1942 -- At the New Yorker, 1943-1944 -- Postwar Europe and Mamaine Paget, 1945 -- Elena Thornton, 1946-1949 -- Memoirs of Hecate County, 1946-1948 -- Talcottville, 1950-1953 -- The Dead Sea scrolls, 1954-1956 --
Fighting the IRS, 1957-1958 -- Harvard, 1959-1962 -- Europe and Wesleyan, 1963-1965 -- Quarrel with Nabokov, 1965-1966 -- The Middle East and the MLA, 1967-1969 -- The dark defile, 1970-1972.
Form Also issued online.
Summary This pioneering life of Edmund Wilson (1895-1972) completes the trilogy on modern American writers that Jeffrey Meyers began with his biographies of Hemingway and Fitzgerald. Wilson, whom Gore Vidal called "America's best mind," had extraordinarily wide interests that ranged far beyond literature. He wrote about art, theater, music, film, and popular culture as well as political events, foreign travel, the revolutionary tradition in Europe, the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Zuni and Iroquois Indians, the American Civil War, the culture and politics of Canada. He was a master of the biographical essay and the autobiographical memoir and was the greatest diarist of his time.
Wilson's life was as interesting as his books and, in its own way, as romantic and chaotic as Fitzgerald's. He lived in bohemian poverty in the 1920s and '30s, suffered a nervous breakdown and the tragic death of his second wife, had three other wives (including Mary McCarthy), attracted an astonishing number of beautiful mistresses (including Edna St. Vincent Millay), and was a compulsive chronicler of his own sexual adventures.
Provenance Gift of Dr. James H. Poivan, Professor of History, Emeritus.
Subject Wilson, Edmund, 1895-1972.
Wilson, Edmund, 1895-1972.
Authors, American -- 20th century -- Biography.
Authors, American.
Chronological Term 20th century
Genre/Form Biographies.
Subject Critics -- United States -- Biography.
Critics.
United States.
Genre/Form Biographies.
Other Form: Online version: Meyers, Jeffrey. Edmund Wilson. Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 1995 (OCoLC)624062628
ISBN 0395689937 : $35.00
9780395689936