In 1963, John Fowles won international recognition with The Collector,
his first published novel. In the years following—with the
publication of The Magus, The French Lieutenant’s Woman, The Ebony
Tower, and his other critically acclaimed works of fiction,
nonfiction, and poetry—Fowles took his place among the most
innovative and important English novelists of our time. Now, with this
first volume of his journals, which covers the years from 1949 to
1965, we see revealed not only the creative development of a great
writer but also the deep connection between Fowles’s
autobiographical experience and his literary inspiration. Commencing
in Fowles’s final year at Oxford, the journals in this volume
chronicle the years he spent as a university lecturer in France; his
experiences teaching school on the Greek island of Spetsai (which
would inspire The Magus) and his love affair there with the married
woman who would later become his first wife; and his return to England
and his ongoing struggle to achieve literary success. It is an account
of a life lived in total engagement with the world; although Fowles
the novelist takes center stage, we see as well Fowles the nascent
poet and critic, ornithologist and gardener, passionate naturalist and
traveler, cinephile and collector of old books. Soon after he fell in
love with his first wife, Elizabeth, Fowles wrote in his journal,
“She has asked me not to write about her in here. But I could not
not write, loving her as I do. . . . What else I betrayed, I could not
betray this diary.” It is that determined, unsparing honesty and
forthrightness that imbues these journals with all the emotional power
and narrative complexity of his novels. They are a revelation of both
the man and the artist.
Les mer
Volume II: 1966-1990
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780307428776
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Digital Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter