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The Writers Chapbook A Compendium Of Fact Opinion Wit And Advice From The Twentieth Centurys Preeminent Writers George Plimpton

  • SKU: BELL-45101634
The Writers Chapbook A Compendium Of Fact Opinion Wit And Advice From The Twentieth Centurys Preeminent Writers George Plimpton
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Writers Chapbook A Compendium Of Fact Opinion Wit And Advice From The Twentieth Centurys Preeminent Writers George Plimpton instant download after payment.

Publisher: Random House Incorporated
File Extension: PDF
File size: 22.33 MB
Pages: 406
Author: George Plimpton
ISBN: 9780679603153, 0679603158
Language: English
Year: 2020

Product desciption

The Writers Chapbook A Compendium Of Fact Opinion Wit And Advice From The Twentieth Centurys Preeminent Writers George Plimpton by George Plimpton 9780679603153, 0679603158 instant download after payment.

   The first issue of The Paris Review in 1953 included an interview on the craft of writing with E. M. Forster, perhaps the greatest living author of the time. Subsequent issues carried interviews with, among others, François Mauriac, Graham Greene, Irwin Shaw, William Styron, Ralph Ellison, and William Faulkner; in the intervening years, many of the world's most significant writers (Ezra Pound, Robert Frost, Ernest Hemingway, John Updike, and John Dos Passos) sat down with The Paris Review. Many of the interviews have been collected in a series of volumes entitled Writers at Work. From these interviews, The Paris Review's editor, George Plimpton, has selected the best and most illuminating insights that the writers have provided and arranged them by subject rather than by author. The book is divided into four parts: "The Writer: A Profile" (including the sections "On Reading," "On Work Habits," On the Audi- ence," etc.); Part II is "Technical Matters" ("On Style," "On Plot," etc.); Part III is "Different Forms" ("On Biography," "On Journalism"); and Part IV is "The Writer's Life," covering topics like conferences, courses, and teaching, along with a section in which writers provided portraits of other writers.
 The Writer's Chapbook is a fund of observations by writers on writing. These range from marvel- ous one-liners (Eugene O'Neill on critics: "I love every bone in their heads"; T. S. Eliot on editors: "I suppose some editors are failed writers--but so are most writers") to expositions on plot, character, and the technical process of putting pen to paper and doing it for a living. "I don't even have a plot," says Norman Mailer; Paul Bowles describes writing in bed; Toni Morrison talks about inventing characters; and Edward Albee and Tom Wolfe explain where they discovered the titles for Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf and The Bonfire of the Vanities.     &n…

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