Bookstore

Quick Search

Author
Title
Description
Keyword
 
 
 
 

Sontag, Susan Listings

If you cannot find what you want on this page, then please use our search feature to search all our listings.

Click on Title to view full description

 
1 Sontag, Susan In America
New York Farrar Straus Giroux Feb-00 374175403 N Hardcover 
Amazon.com&newline;As an essayist, Susan Sontag has tended to stick pretty rigorously to the modern age, whether she's anatomizing the wild world of camp or roasting Leni Riefenstahl over the coals. But in her fiction--particularly in such fin-de-siècle productions as The Volcano Lover--she's clearly felt the allure of the past. And In America, which chronicles the travails of a late-19th-century actress, shows Sontag in top time-traveling form. What's more, it illuminates her motives for glancing so persistently backward. &doublequote;Almost everything good seems located in the past,&doublequote; she notes in a first-person prologue, &doublequote;perhaps that's an illusion, but I feel nostalgic for every era before I was born; and one is freer of modern inhibitions, perhaps because one bears no responsibility for the past.&doublequote; There's nothing, it seems, like the age of innocence--a golden moment before we moderns had the curse of self-consciousness brought down on our heads.&newline;&newline;It's ironic, then, that In America revolves around a regular paragon of self-consciousness: a brilliant Polish diva named Maryna Zalezowska. The year is 1876, and this Bernhardt-like figure has decided to abandon the stage and establish a utopian commune in (you guessed it) California. Not exactly a logical career move, is it? Yet this journey to America does involve a major feat of self-reinvention, for which Maryna may be uniquely qualified. Writing a letter home from the brave new world of Hoboken, New Jersey, she argues against the idea that &doublequote;life cannot be restarted, that we are all prisoners of whatever we have become.&doublequote; And once she arrives in Anaheim with her husband, child, and fellow utopians in tow, she does seem to slough off the skin of her older, European self. She is now that exotic creature, an American, existing in an equally exotic landscape--which happens to elicit some of Sontag's most lyrical prose: They had never felt as erect, as vertical, their skin brushed by the hot Santa Ana wind, their ears lulled by the oddly intrusive sound of their own footfalls.... Hardly anything is near anything here: those slouching braided sentinels, the yucca trees, and bouquets of drooping spears, the agaves, and the squat clusters of prickly pears, all so widely spaced, so unresembling--and nothing had to do with anything else. Like every utopia in human history, Maryna's is a failure. Following its collapse, she is moved to return to the theater--but as an American, now, plugged securely into the middlebrow culture of her adopted land. The rest of the novel charts her brilliant career among the philistines, along with a number of heated erotic detours.&newline;&newline;Given its subject matter, Sontag's novel is oddly anti-dramatic: she juggles a half-dozen narrative strategies but seldom allows us to sink our teeth into a prolonged scene. Yet she delivers a great many other riches by way of compensation. Her take on the perils and pleasures of expatriation is worthy of Henry James (who actually makes a cameo appearance, assuring Maryna that England and America will morph into &doublequote;one big Anglo-Saxon total.&doublequote;) And she includes a superbly entertaining portrait of theatrical life, culminating in a virtuoso monologue from Edwin Booth that suggests a Gilded Age Samuel Beckett. As always, there is the pleasure of watching the author's formidable intelligence at work, immersing us in the details of a character or landscape and then surfacing for a deep draught of abstraction. Perhaps Sontag is too cerebral to ever produce a straightforward work of fiction. But this time around, anyway, she brings both brains and literary brawn to bear on what Henry James himself called &doublequote;the complex fate&doublequote; of being an American. --James Marcus &newline;&newline;From Publishers Weekly&newline;As she did in The Volcano Lover, Sontag crafts a novel of ideas in which real figures from the past enact their lives against an assiduously researched, almost cinematically vivid background. Here again her signal achievement is to offer fresh and insightful commentary on the social and cultural currents of an age, with a distinctive understanding of how historical e 
Price: 6.00 USD
Add to Shopping Cart
 
 

 


Sontag, Susan on Abookstop.com
Sontag, Susan on Adelaidebooksellers.com.au
Sontag, Susan on Alexthefatdawg.co.uk
Sontag, Susan on Anovelideabooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Atlantavintagebooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Bentriverbooksandmusic.com
Sontag, Susan on Beulahparkbooks.com.au
Sontag, Susan on Bonbonbooks.co.uk
Sontag, Susan on Bookalley.com
Sontag, Susan on Bookbrowzers.com
Sontag, Susan on Bookhouseindinkytown.com
Sontag, Susan on Booksandinkbookshop.com
Sontag, Susan on Booksbouquins.org
Sontag, Susan on Booksfoundfast.co.uk
Sontag, Susan on Booksinrockford.com
Sontag, Susan on Booksliquidation.com
Sontag, Susan on Bungalowbooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Carlsonturnerbooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Chrismcmillenbooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Christinesbooks.net
Sontag, Susan on Frugalfamilybooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Genethebookpeddler.com
Sontag, Susan on Ginny6books.com
Sontag, Susan on Hammondsbooks.net
Sontag, Susan on Lacroixbookseller.com
Sontag, Susan on Leatherstalkingbooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Literatecat.com
Sontag, Susan on Lostinthestars.com
Sontag, Susan on Madamebutterflybooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Moremoes.com
Sontag, Susan on Oddvolumebooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Onceuponatimebooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Pgbbooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Phatpocket.com
Sontag, Susan on Psychobabel.eu
Sontag, Susan on Riverrunbooksandprints.com
Sontag, Susan on Rsgeerbooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Russellbooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Springystreasures.com
Sontag, Susan on Stillwaterbooks.co.uk
Sontag, Susan on Telegraphbooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Themoldybookstore.com
Sontag, Susan on Turnthepagebooks.com
Sontag, Susan on Villagebookmarket.com
Sontag, Susan on Wiseowlbooks.net



Finally Founded in 2006
Questions, comments, or suggestions
Please write to books@BotanicalBay.com
Copyright©2010. All Rights Reserved.
Powered by ChrisLands.com