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BookPrinted Material
Author Bellow, Saul.

Title Novels, 1970-1982 / Saul Bellow.

Publication Info. New York : Library of America : Distributed to the trade in the U.S. by Penguin Group (USA), [2010]
©2010

Item Status

Location Call No. Status OPAC Message Public Note Gift Note
 Moore Stacks  PS3503.E4488 A6 2010    Available  ---
Description 1064 pages ; 21 cm.
Series The Library of America series ; 209
Library of America ; 209.
Note "James Wood wrote the notes for this volume"--P. facing t.p.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 1034-1064).
Contents Mr. Sammler's planet -- Humboldt's gift -- The dean's December.
Summary The third volume of the Library of America's edition of Saul Bellow's complete novels collects three essential works: Mr. Sammler's Planet (1970), Humboldt's Gift (1975) -- and The Dean's December (1982). In each, Bellow shows himself a master of biting social commentary and bold characterization--above all through a trio of unforgettable protagonists. These novels, written in the period of Bellow's greatest literary and popular acclaim--he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1976--are unsparing yet humane, and range widely in their philosophical and cultural concerns. They offer the indispensable voice of a great American raconteur and thinker.
In Mr. Sammler's Planet, the anarchic forces of late-1960s America are set loose on Artur Sammler, a highly cultured septuagenarian and European émigré who seeks "with God, to be free from the bondage of the ordinary and the finite." A Holocaust survivor living out his latter days in Manhattan, Sammler endures the city's everyday barbarism, as shocking as it is casual, and must contend with absurd complications when a manuscript goes missing. Written shortly before the first moon landing, the novel's dark speculations, filtered through Sammler's urbane intelligence, are cosmic in scope.
Humboldt's Gift depicts the deep and troubled friendship between the tormented poet Von Humboldt Fleisher and the renowned writer Charlie Citrine. Humboldt has died in squalid obscurity, but for Citrine the memory of their earlier days persists as counterpoint to a middle age studded with difficulties: a messy divorce, a demanding mistress, and the attentions of a Chicago hoodlum who claims that Charlie has cheated him. Writing of the book's "rich and suggestive" narrative voice, Sven Birkerts observes, "There is a feeling when reading this novel that a tightly rolled sultan's carpet has splashed open before our eyes."
In The Dean's December, Albert Corde experiences totalitarianism firsthand when he travels to Bucharest to visit his dying mother-in-law. As college dean in Chicago he has attracted controversy through his journalism and his role in a racially charged murder trial. Alternating between Romanian and American settings, the novel is a profound indictment of official hypocrisy and corruption on both sides of the Iron Curtain.
Subject Holocaust survivors -- Fiction.
Holocaust survivors.
Genre/Form Fiction.
Subject City and town life -- Fiction.
City and town life.
New York (N.Y.) -- Fiction.
National Book Committee.
Intellectuals -- Fiction.
Intellectuals.
Jewish men -- Fiction.
Jewish men.
Authors -- Fiction.
Authors.
Poets -- Fiction.
Poets.
Friendship -- Fiction.
Friendship -- Fiction.
Deans (Education) -- Fiction.
Deans (Education)
Americans -- Romania -- Fiction.
Americans.
Romania.
Bucharest (Romania) -- Fiction.
Social problems -- Fiction.
Social problems.
Mothers-in-law -- Fiction.
Mothers-in-law.
Chicago (Ill.) -- Fiction.
Genre/Form Psychological fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Jewish fiction.
Political fiction.
Political fiction.
Domestic fiction.
Domestic fiction.
Campus fiction.
Campus fiction.
Subject Friendships.
Added Author Bellow, Saul. Mr. Sammler's planet.
Bellow, Saul. Humboldt's gift.
Bellow, Saul. Dean's December.
Wood, James, 1965-
Added Title Novels. Selections https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2003039054
ISBN 9781598530797
1598530798