
Graham Greene
A Life in Letters
16 December 2008
Territory Rights — Worldwide excluding Canada and the British Commonwealth.
Description
This absorbing autobiography in letters offers a remarkable window into the life of one of the greatest novelists of our time. "The Best Book of the Year." --David Lodge, The Guardian [UK]
One of the undisputed masters of                 twentieth-century English prose,  Graham Greene                   (1904-1991)  wrote tens of thousands of personal     letters. This exemplary volume presents a new                    and engrossing account of his  life constructed                   out of his  own words. Impeccably edited by      scholar Richard Greene, the                     letters--including many  unavailable even                to his official  biographer--give a new  perspective on a life that combined literary                 achievement, political action,  espionage,                        travel, and  romantic entanglement. The letters     describe his travels in such places as  Mexico,                   Vietnam, and Cuba,  where he observed the  struggles of mankind with a compassionate and                 truthful eye. Letters to friends  such as Evelyn                  Waugh and Muriel Spark offer a glimpse into the  literary culture in which he wrote, while others                reveal the agonies of his heart.  The sheer range                  of experience  contained in Greene's    correspondence defies comparison.






