Bellow's People

How Saul Bellow Made Life Into Art

28 June 2016

David Mikics (Author)

Description

A leading literary critic’s innovative study of how the Nobel Prize–winning author turned life into art.

David Mikics has been hailed by Harold Bloom as one of our finest literary critics. In this fresh and revealing book, he examines Saul Bellow’s work through the real-life relationships and friendships that Bellow transmuted into the genius of his art. The book is divided into eight chapters on some of the extraordinary people who mattered most to Bellow—family members like his irascible brother Morrie; friends like the novelists and critics Ralph Ellison, Delmore Schwartz and Allan Bloom; and wives and lovers. Bellow’s People is a perfect introduction to Bellow’s life and work and an incisive study of the art of literature. As Mikics argues, “Bellow is our novelist of personality in all its wrinkles, its glories and shortcomings. Only through personality, he tells us, can we know the world.”

Reviews

"... a breezy, highly readable and often entertaining study of some important figures in the author’s life..." — Jay Parini, Literary Review

"The book [Bellow's People] also makes one want to rediscover Bellow’s characters in all their Dickensian, tragi-comic brilliance, and read again his sentences, which shine with a rare intensity." — The National

Hardback

9780393246872

147 x 218 mm • 270 pages

£36.50

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Ebook

9780393246889

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£19.99

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