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Cargando... The Paris Review Interviews II (2014)por Philip Gourevitch, Philip Gourevitch (Editor)
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. As a writer and an avid reader I love most interviews with authors, but "The Paris Review" interviews are particularly wonderful! The questions are thoughtful, the answers revealing, the interviewers take their time and aren't afraid to stray from the point and explore tangents. This collection includes interviews with some of my favorite authors, I pick it up and refer to it often, include portions of it in my materials for the Classics class I teach, and share quotes indiscriminately with anyone who will listen! sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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Son el modelo del reportaje literario moderno? Los entrevistados estan bien elegidos, los entrevistadores bien preparados, los resultados bien compaginados. Tomados en conjunto; equivalen a una sabrosa cronica intima de la vida literaria contemporanea. No es un riesgo apostar a que dentro de 30 y hasta 300 anos estas conversaciones seran invalorables para los estudiosos de las literatura del siglo XX. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)823.9109Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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Isaac Bashevis Singer's very subtle and very welcoming manners definitely lured me to examine his writing, and his view on forthcoming technology was definitely enough to have me drawn in.
Gabriel García Márquez was also quite humble, and made me wish to delve into his writing.
Speaking of which, a bunch of the authors in this volume refer to his "magical realism", a term I haven't come to grips with; other writers are also mentioned to adhere to this type of writing.
Philip Larkin, refusing to be interviewed in person, is here in print for one of the very few times he's been interviewed at all. He's witty, funny and very staunch. I love the way he views things, apart from how he dislikes modernism and thinks one jazz-musician killed jazz for all future. Still, Larkin didn't want to be named Poet Laureate for which I will always revere him, not to mention his style of writing and poems.
Harold Bloom and Toni Morrison both added inspiration and insight, but William Gaddis infused me with nothing. Alice Munro seems frank and easy-going, and Stephen King is...slighted by Stanley Kubrick, as always.
All in all: a very recommendable volume. Can't wait to get into the others!
I've screen-shot a bunch of pages from this volume, and they're viewable for your pleasure here. http://issuu.com/pivic/docs/parisreviewinterviewsvol2 ( )