The interior castle : the art and life of Jean Stafford
(Book)
Author
Status
General Shelving - 3rd Floor
PS3569.T2 Z69 1992
1 available
PS3569.T2 Z69 1992
1 available
Description
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Copies
Location | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
General Shelving - 3rd Floor | PS3569.T2 Z69 1992 | On Shelf |
Subjects
LC Subjects
OCLC Fast Subjects
More Details
Format
Book
Physical Desc
xv, 430 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Language
English
Notes
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 383-415) index.
Description
An important moment in American literary history takes life in this stunning biography of Jean Stafford, one of the most successful, admired--and troubled--of the brilliant and influential midcentury circle of writers and critics that included Allen Tate, Caroline Gordon, Peter Taylor, Delmore Schwartz, Randall Jarrell, and Robert Lowell, Stafford's first husband. Ann Hulbert shows us how Stafford, raised in Colorado, the daughter of a failed writer of Westerns, came of literary age in the East, yet fiercely maintained her connection with her provincial background, forging the unique style that marked her highly acclaimed first novel, Boston Adventure; her Masterpiece, The Mountain Lion; her third novel, The Catherine Wheel; and the stories she published in The New Yorker and elsewhere, which were honored in 1970 with a Pulitzer Prize. We follow Stafford through the early experiences to which she returned again and again in her fiction, and which helped shape her disenchanted vision--her father's sudden loss of his fortune; her shame as an adolescent, living in a boardinghouse in Boulder run by her mother; her aesthetic experimentation as a member of the intellectually maverick "Barbarians" at the University of Colorado; her exciting but troubling Wanderjahr in Nazi Germany, where she watched civilization crumbling. We see her take her place as a forceful, attractive, witty, yet also insecure woman among a group of spirited young writers who were learning from and challenging their older mentors--the increasingly powerful Southern critics and the Partisan Review circle in New York. With her marriage to Lowell at twenty-four, she embarked on a feverishly creative but ill-fated course that held auguries of his and his fellow poets' tragic paths: she struggled with Catholicism, confronted domestic violence, battled with alcoholism and mental instability, and throughout it all wrote formally impeccable fiction. And we see her as she finds some happiness with her third husband, the writer A.J. Liebling, part of the New Yorker world that had become her home in the late 1940s. Throughout, we are made aware of Stafford's constant search for a bastion of order--a safe place, an escape from the unsettling sense of vulnerability that engulfed her, an interior castle--from which to approach her life and her art.
Local note
SACFinal081324
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Citations
APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)
Hulbert, A. (1992). The interior castle: the art and life of Jean Stafford . A.A. Knopf.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Hulbert, Ann. 1992. The Interior Castle: The Art and Life of Jean Stafford. New York: A.A. Knopf.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Hulbert, Ann. The Interior Castle: The Art and Life of Jean Stafford New York: A.A. Knopf, 1992.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Hulbert, A. (1992). The interior castle: the art and life of jean stafford. New York: A.A. Knopf.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Hulbert, Ann. The Interior Castle: The Art and Life of Jean Stafford A.A. Knopf, 1992.
Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.
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