EBOOK

Samuel Johnson

A Life

David Nokes
(0)
Pages
448
Year
2009
Language
English

About

A modern biography of Samuel Johnson that will serve as the definitive work on the legendary British man of letters.

In this groundbreaking portrait of Samuel Johnson, David Nokes positions the great thinker in his rightful place as an active force in the Enlightenment, not a mere recorder or performer, and demonstrates how his interaction with life impacted his work. This is the story of how Johnson struggled to define the English language, why he embarked upon such foolhardiness, and where he found the courage to do so. Moving beyond James Boswell's seminal narrative, about the life of the preeminent eighteenth-century novelist, literary critic, biographer, editor, essayist, and lexicographer, this biography addresses his life and action through the hitherto unexplored perspectives of such major players as Johnson's wife, Tetty; Hester Thrale, in whose household he resided for seventeen-years while working on his annotated Shakespeare; and Frances Barber, the black manservant who in many ways was like a son to Johnson. An in-depth interrogation of the primary sources, particularly the letters, offer surprising insight into Johnson's formative experiences. At last, here's a reading of the great man that will reveal the rightful glory of an enduring work and an incomparable scholar.

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Reviews

"David Nokes, a prominent scholar of 18th-century English literature, takes a fresh look at Samuel Johnson, the man known as the creator of the dictionary. In doing so, Nokes shows a very human side of Johnson, and the perspective of his times. . . . Nokes has written an excellent biography that shows Johnson's human side and his struggles."
Mary Foster, The Associated Press
"David Nokes has a firm understanding of what goes toward the making of a literary life, and his biography of Johnson . . . is not merely a crisp rendition of the known facts, but a book that shows the man in some new interpretative light."
Andrew O'Hagan, The New York Review of Books

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