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Claire Harman

    Claire Harman zeichnet sich durch ihren scharfen, analytischen Blick auf die literarische Biografie aus, der kritische Einsichten mit fesselnder Erzählung verbindet. Ihre Arbeit befasst sich mit den Leben und Werken bemerkenswerter Schriftsteller und untersucht die komplexen Verbindungen zwischen ihren persönlichen Erfahrungen und ihrem kreativen Schaffen. Harman ist geschickt darin, die Komplexität des Urheberseins aufzudecken und nachzuverfolgen, wie literarische Vermächtnisse sich entwickeln und die Kultur durchdringen. Ihre nachdenkliche Prosa bietet den Lesern eine neue Perspektive auf beständige literarische Persönlichkeiten.

    Murder by the Book
    All Sorts of Lives
    • 'All Sorts of Lives is a beautiful, fastidiously researched and fascinating exploration of Mansfield's life and work' A.L. KENNEDY Restless outsider, masher-up of form and convention, Katherine Mansfield’s career was short but dazzling. She was the only writer Virginia Woolf admitted being jealous of, yet by the 1950s was so undervalued that Elizabeth Bowen was moved to ask, 'Where is she – our missing contemporary?' In this inventive and intimate study, Claire Harman takes a fresh look at Mansfield’s life and achievements, through the form she did so much to revolutionise: the short story. Exploring ten pivotal works, we watch how Mansfield’s desire to grow as a writer pushed her art into unknown territory, and how illness sharpened her extraordinary vitality: ‘Would you not like to try all sorts of lives – one is so very small.’ ‘What a gift to the biographer, this life of adventure and sickness and sex and celebrity… Brilliant’ Sunday Times ‘A searching, incisive and compulsive book. A lesson in how to read and connect and understand’ Sunjeev Sahota

      All Sorts of Lives
    • Murder by the Book

      • 224 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden
      3,3(95)Abgeben

      On a spring morning in 1840, on an ultra-respectable Mayfair street, a household of servants awoke to discover that their unobtrusive master, Lord William Russell, was lying in bed with his throat cut so deeply that the head was almost severed. The whole of London, from monarch to maidservants, was scandalized by the unfolding drama of such a shocking murder, but behind it was another story, a work of fiction. For when the culprit eventually confessed, he claimed his actions were the direct result of reading the best-selling crime-novel of the day. This announcement amazed the key literary figures of the time, from Thackeray to Dickens, and posed the question- can a work of fiction do real harm?

      Murder by the Book