Enter Author, Keyword or ISBN
£30.00
Katherine Anne Porter, edited by Darlene Harbour Unrue
Hermione Lee writes:
Plenty of writers take a lifetime to turn their past into art. Plenty of writers – especially those from the American South – return in their fiction to a community deeply rooted in its past, even though in life they want to escape it. Porter was not a great admirer of Faulkner, but she was very sympathetic to Eudora Welty and Flannery O’Connor. Like them she paid close attention to children’s and women’s lives, to the private worlds of vulnerable figures in a strongly familial, traditional, religious and intrusive society. It would be possible to pigeonhole Porter as a typical Southern woman writer, with her evocations of post-Civil War rural communities, her cast of powerful matriarchs and weak, bullying fathers, quarrelling husbands and wives, wandering misfits and resentful, adventuring daughters. But in her long life (from 1890 to 1980) there was a peculiar combination of rapid, quickly abandoned adventures (though she always said she preferred ‘experience’ to ‘adventures’) – countries, houses, affairs, marriages, friendships – and a slow, uncertain, laborious piecing together of those experiences into fiction.
(LRB 12 February 2009)
Library of America | hardback 1039 pp. |ISBN: 9781598530292
Your name: *
Your e-mail: *
Recipient's email: *
Cart is empty
View cart | Checkout
Username:
Password:
Log in
Recover password Register for an account
Thursday 11 February at 7.00 p.m.
Thursday 25 February at 7.00 p.m.
Thursday 4 March at 7.00 p.m.
Monday 15 February at 6.30 p.m.
More Events..
Regular news and offers from the London Review Bookshop
Your email:
Type the characters in the picture (enable images in your browser options if you can't see a picture): Get a different code
Subscribe