EBOOK
Pages
400
Year
2022
Language
English

About

A complete collection of Robert Lowell's autobiographical prose, from unpublished writings about his youth to reflections on the triumphs and confusions of his adult life.



Robert Lowell's Memoirs is an unprecedented literary discovery: the manuscript of Lowell's lyrical evocation of his childhood, which was written in the 1950s and has remained unpublished until now. Meticulously edited by Steven Gould Axelrod and Grzegorz Kosc, it serves as a precursor or companion to his groundbreaking book of poems Life Studies, which signaled a radically new prose-inflected direction in his work, and indeed in American poetry.

Memoirs also includes intense depictions of Lowell's mental illness and his determined efforts to recover. It concludes with Lowell's reminiscences of other writers, among them T. S. Eliot, Robert Frost, Ezra Pound, John Berryman, Anne Sexton, Hannah Arendt, and Sylvia Plath. Memoirs demonstrates Lowell's expansive gifts as a prose stylist and his powers of introspection and observation. It provides striking new evidence of the range and brilliance of Lowell's achievement.

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Reviews

"[Memoirs is] densely yet nimbly written, and you sense Lowell's judgment and discrimination in every paragraph . . . Lowell freshens the eye . . . This book's editors, Steven Gould Axelrod and Grzegorz Kosc, silently and deftly amend, in their footnotes, Lowell's many small errors of fact, and point out where he seems to have invented characters."
Dwight Garner, The New York Times
"Excellent reading . . . Lowell was always a capable prose writer, but the language on display in this childhood memoir is a good deal more than that . . . Taken as a whole, 'My Autobiography' is nothing less than a treasure in the literary memoir genre. One might well wonder if it becomes, over time, the piece of writing Lowell is best remembered for."
August Kleinzahler, The New York Times Book Review

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