Koestler : the literary and political odyssey of a twentieth-century skeptic / Michael Scammell.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780394576305 (alk. paper)
- ISBN: 0394576306 (alk. paper)
- Physical Description: xxi, 689 p., [16] p. of plates : ill., ports., geneal. table ; 25 cm.
- Edition: 1st ed.
- Publisher: New York : Random House, c2009.
Content descriptions
Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographical references (p. [579]-666) and index. |
Summary, etc.: | The first authorized biography of one of the most influential and controversial intellectuals of the twentieth century, based on new research and full access to its subject's papers. Best known as the creator of the classic anti-Communist novel Darkness at Noon, Koestler is here revealed as a man whose personal life was as astonishing as his literary accomplishments. The young Hungarian Jew whose experience of anti-Semitism and devotion to Zionism provoked him to move to Palestine; the foreign correspondent who risked his life from the North Pole to Franco's Spain; the committed Communist for whom the brutal truth of Stalin's show trials inspired the angry novel that became an instant classic in 1940; the escape from occupied France by joining the Foreign Legion and his bluffing his way illegally to England, where his controversial 1943 novel Arrival and Departure was the first to portray Hitler's Final Solution. Scammell also gives a full account of the author's voluminous writings, making the case that the autobiographies and essays are fit to stand beside Darkness at Noon as works of lasting literary value.--From publisher description. |
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- 1 of 1 copy available at GRPL.
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Koestler : The Literary and Political Odyssey of a Twentieth-Century Skeptic
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Author Notes
Koestler : The Literary and Political Odyssey of a Twentieth-Century Skeptic
Michael Scammell is the author of Solzhenitsyn, a Biography, which won the Los Angeles Times and English PEN's prizes for best biography after its publication. He is the editor of The Solzhenitsyn Files , Unofficial Art from the Soviet Union , and Russia' s Other Writers, and has translated Nabokov, Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, and other Russian authors into English. His reviews and articles have appeared in The New York Review of Books, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The New Republic, Harpers, and elsewhere. He teaches creative writing and translation in the School of the Arts at Columbia University in New York. Michael Scammell has been shortlisted for the LA Times biography prize.