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Story about the Story Volume 2

by J C Hallman
Story about the Story Volume 2

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  • Synopses & Reviews

ISBN13: 9781935639688
ISBN10: 1935639684
Condition: Standard


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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments

In the second volume of The Story About the Story, editor J. C. Hallman continues to argue for an alternative to the staid five-paragraph-essay writing that has inoculated so many against the effects of good books. Writers have long approached writing about reading from an intensely personal perspective, incorporating their pasts and their passions into their process of interpretation. Never before collected in a single volume, the many essays Hallman has compiled build on the idea of a "creative criticism," and offers new possibilities for how to write about reading. The Story About the Story Vol. II documents not only an identifiable trend in writing about books that can and should be emulated, it also offers lessons from a remarkable range of celebrated authors that amount to an invaluable course on both how to write and how to read well. Whether they discuss a staple of the canon (Thomas Mann on Leo Tolstoy), the merits of a contemporary (Vivian Gornick on Grace Paley), a pillar of genre-writing (Jane Tompkins on Louis L'Amour), or, arguably, the funniest man on the planet (David Shields on Bill Murray), these essays are by turns poignant, smart, suggestive, intellectual, humorous, sassy, scathing, laudatory, wistful, and hopeful--and above all deeply engaged in a process of careful reading. The essays in The Story About the Story Vol. II chart a trajectory that digs deep into the past and aims toward a future in which literature can play a new and more profound role in how we think, read, live, and write.

Review

Praise for the Story About The Story series

"More than just a beautiful read . . . .The series is in its own way important to the world. Because if theres any justice out there, itll eventually find its way into those dull high-school curricula.

To counteract the joyless misreadings and picking of scabs that have become todays literary criticism, Hallman is collecting writing about books that is every bit as personal, humane and emotionally rich as the books themselves."

—The Willamette Week

"The problem with this book: too many irresistible things.”

—James Salter, author of A Sport and a Pastime

"All great criticism begins with love. After all, we read books not from obligation but for pleasure, for mental excitement, for what A.E. Housman called the tingle at the back of the neck. In The Story About the Story there are no merely literary essays: Instead J.C. Hallman has gathered love letters, exuberant appreciations, confessions of envy and admiration. In these pages some of our finest writers stand up and testify to the power of literature to shake and shape our very souls."

—Michael Dirda, Pulitzer Prize-winning critic and author of Bound to Please

"An invaluable guide for any reader of literature, as well as for the practitioners themselves."

—Daniel Halpern; editor of The Art of the Story

“There is no better path to the heart of a great writers expression than keen intuition born of deep regard, and no one more likely to have both than a fellow writer. This collection of master reader-writers appraising their admirations is not in the least predictable. Turn the pages: surprise, surprise, surprise!”

—Sven Birkerts, author of Reading Life: Books for the Ages and The Gutenberg Elegies: The Fate of Reading in an Electronic Age

“A novel, yes. A film, yes. But when have you ever been sorry for a book of essays to end? I was with this book. Each of these essays investigates good writing by writing well about it. They are all formally elegant and smart, smart, smart. And a delight to read.”

—Mary Jo Bang, author of Elegy

"If you love literature, don' borrow The Story About the Story, because you'll never give it back. Buy it."

—Salon.com

Synopsis

The essays in The Story About the Story Vol. II chart a trajectory that digs deep into the past and aims toward a future in which literature can play a new and more profound role in how we think, read, live, and write.

About the Author

In addition to editing The Story About the Story, J.C. Hallman is the author of several books, including The Chess Artist, In Utopia, Wm and H'ry, and B and Me: A True Story of Literary Arousal.

The list of contributors includes:

1) Wendy Lesser on Cervantes

2) Philip Lopate on Stendhal

3) John Berryman on Anne Frank

4) David Shields on Bill Murray

5) Zadie Smith on Hurston F

6) Charles Baxter on Chekhov

7) Thomas Mann on Tolstoy

8) Jane Tompkins on LAmour

9) Joyce Carol Oates on Mary Shelley

10) Martin Amis on Larkin

11) Margaret Atwood on Wells

12) Michael Dirda on “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”

13) Walter Benjamin on Leskov

14) Nicholson Baker on Defoe

15) James Thurber on James

16) Elizabeth Hardwick on Melville

17) David Foster Wallace on Updike

18) Jacque Barzun on Abraham Lincoln

19) Vivian Gornick on Paley

20) H.L. Mencken on Dreiser

21) Susan Cheever on Alcott

22) Ralph Ellison on Crane

23) Joseph Conrad on Crane

24) Francisco Goldman on Bolano

25) Katherine Anne Porter on Cather

26) Harold Bloom on Hans Christian Andersen


Table of Contents

Ecstatically: How to Write About Reading – J.C. Hallman

Criticism – Henry James

1) The First Novel – Wendy Lesser

2) Portrait Inside My Head – Phillip Lopate

3) The Development of Anne Frank – John Berryman

4) The Only Solution to the Soul is the Senses: A Mediation on Bil Murray and Myself – David Shields

5) Their Eyes Were Watching God: What Does Soulful Mean? – Zadie Smith Hurston

6) Sonyas Last Speech, or, Double-Voicing: An Essay in Sixteen Sections – Charles Baxter

7) Thomas Mann on Leo Tolstoy – Thomas Mann

8) The Last of the Breed: Homage to Louis LAmour – Jane Tompkins

9) Frankensteins Fallen Angel – Joyce Carol Oates

10) Philip Larkin 1922 – 1985 – Martin Amis

11) Ten Ways of Looking at The Island of Doctor Moreau by H.G. Wells ¬– Margaret Atwood

12) Sir Gawain and the Green Knight – Michael Dirda

13) The Storyteller: Reflections on the Works of Nikolai Leskov – Walter Benjamin

14) Defoe, Truthteller – Nicholson Baker

15) The Wings of Henry James – James Thurber

16) Billy Budd – Elizabeth Hardwick

17) Certainly the End of Something or Other, One Would Sort of Have to Think – David Foster Wallace

18) Lincoln the Writer – Jacque Barzun

19) Grace Paley – Vivian Gornick

20) Theodore Dreiser – H.L. Mencken

21) Little Women – Susan Cheever

22) Stephen Crane and the Mainstream of American Fiction – Ralph Ellison

23) Joseph Conrad on Stephen Crane – Joseph Conrad

24) Brick – Francisco Goldman

25) Reflections on Willa Cather – Katherine Anne Porter

26) Trust the Tale, Not the Teller: Hans Christian Andersen – Harold Bloom


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Product Details

ISBN:
9781935639688
Binding:
Trade Paperback
Publication date:
09/24/2013
Publisher:
TIN HOUSE BOOKS
Pages:
352
Height:
.90IN
Width:
5.40IN
Copyright Year:
2013
Author:
J. C. Hallman
Author:
Zadie Smith
Author:
Charles Baxter
Author:
Margaret Atwood
Author:
David Foster Wallace
Author:
Martin Amis
Author:
J C Hallman
Author:
J. C. Hallman.
Author:
Tinhouse
Subject:
Anthologies-Essays

Ships free on qualified orders.
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List Price:$18.95
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