Ebook Download Barbarian Days: a Surfing Life

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Ebook Download Barbarian Days: a Surfing Life BARBARIAN DAYS: A SURFING LIFE PDF, EPUB, EBOOK William Finnegan | 512 pages | 31 May 2016 | Little, Brown Book Group | 9781472151414 | English | London, United Kingdom Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life by William Finnegan, Paperback | Barnes & Noble® Barbarian Days is a beautiful memoir. Through his tale a lifelong surfer, writer William Finnegan takes you on an exciting journey across the world. Buy this book on Amazon Highly recommend. Terror and ecstasy ebb and flow around the edges of things, each threatening to overwhelm the dreamer. An unearthly beauty saturates an enormous arena of moving water, latent violence, too-real explosions, and sky. Scenes feel mythic even as they unfold. I always feel a ferocious ambivalence: I want to be nowhere else; I want to be anywhere else. Thus a ten- foot wave is not slightly more powerful than an eight-foot wave—because the leap is not from eight to ten but from sixty-four to a hundred, making it over 50 percent more powerful. It was physical, this postsurf mood, but it had a distinct emotionality too. It was a long, tapering — a very long, very precisely tapering — left. The walls were dark gray against a pale gray sea. This was it. The lineup had an unearthly symmetry. Breaking waves peeled so evenly that they looked like still photographs. Staring through the binoculars, I forgot to breathe for entire six-wave sets. This, by God, was it. Now among the most renowned in the world, the Fijian break is one of perhaps a handful in its class that Finnegan has intimate, masterly knowledge of. Still, Finnegan considerately shows himself paying the price of admission in a few near drownings, and these are among the most electrifying moments in the book. Finnegan returns to California for high school, where he discovers that surfers have become outcasts. Sixteen, Finnegan has suddenly part of a counter-culture, one that he has always known and loved. He writes about one of his close friends, who also loves surfing, being forced to drop out of the football team to surf. Finnegan attends the University of California Santa Cruz, but soon drops out, deciding to move back to Hawaii with his girlfriend in Finnegan is deeply happy back in Hawaii with a woman whom he thinks of as the love of his life; however, things become complicated when she gets pregnant and has an abortion. After the abortion, which causes some emotional separation between the two, his girlfriend leaves him to find her father, who is wandering around southern California, addicted to LSD. Devastated by the break-up, Finnegan becomes aimless, mostly following his heart and his desire to find the perfect wave. He works at the railroad for a time making a decent living but leaves to travel to the South Pacific with close friend and writer Bryan Di Salvatore. In Southeast Asia, Finnegan begins a novel, but he tires of traveling in Indonesia before the book is finished. He wonders whether to return home to finish the novel, but decides, instead, to go to South Africa, where he teaches in an all-black school. This leads him to write his book about Apartheid. After years of traveling the world and writing, Finnegan returns home to California, where he lives in foggy, cold San Francisco with his girlfriend and eventual wife , Caroline. Even in the frigid Pacific, Finnegan surfs. Barbarian Days by William Finnegan: Summary & Notes - Calvin Rosser Through the sheer intensity of his descriptive powers and the undeniable ways in which surfing has shaped his life, Barbarian Days is an utterly convincing study in the joy of treating seriously an unserious thing Barbarian Days is less an ode to independence than a celebration of deliberate constriction, of making choices that determine what you think about and who you know. As Finnegan demonstrates, surfing, like good writing, is an act of vigilant noticing. There are too many breathtaking, original things in Barbarian Days to do more than mention here — observations about surfing that have simply never been made before, or certainly never so well. Why We Swim. Beautiful on the Outside: A Memoir. Graphic Nonfiction. In Waves. Get the Book Marks Bulletin Email address:. Graphic Novels. Literature in Translation. Story Collections. Investigative Journalism. In other words, making something exceedingly difficult look easy. The gift for writing a clean line is rare, and the gift for riding one even rarer. Finnegan possesses both. The author touches on love, on responsibility, on politics, individuality and morality, as well as on the lesser-known aspects of surfing: the toll it takes on the body, the weird lingo, the whacky community. Finnegan recaptures the waves lost and found, the euphoria, the danger…the allure. This summer, New Yorker writer Finnegan recalls his teenage years in the California and Hawaii of the s—when surfing was an escape for loners and outcasts. A delightful storyteller, Finnegan takes readers on a journey from Hawaii to Australia, Fiji, and South Africa, where finding those waves is as challenging as riding them. A lyrical and intense memoir. When you buy a book, we donate a book. Sign in. The Best Books of So Far. Read An Excerpt. Apr 26, ISBN Add to Cart. Also available from:. Jul 21, ISBN Available from:. Paperback —. Add to Cart Add to Cart. Also by William Finnegan. See all books by William Finnegan. Product Details. Inspired by Your Browsing History. Lab Girl. Hope Jahren. My Family and Other Animals. Gerald Durrell. Waging Heavy Peace. Sound Man. Classic Krakauer. Jon Krakauer. The Last Pass. Gary M. Here is New York. Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl. Carrie Brownstein. If You Ask Me. Never Broken. Darkness Visible. William Styron. The Chiffon Trenches. A Very Punchable Face. Not Dead Yet. Phil Collins. Haruki Murakami. In a Sunburned Country. The Feather Thief. Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life | Literary Hub This, by God, was it. Now among the most renowned in the world, the Fijian break is one of perhaps a handful in its class that Finnegan has intimate, masterly knowledge of. Still, Finnegan considerately shows himself paying the price of admission in a few near drownings, and these are among the most electrifying moments in the book. It was as if we were suspended above the reef, floating on a cushion of nothing. Approaching waves were like optical illusions. And when I caught one and stood up, it disappeared. I was flying down the line, but all I could see was brilliant reef streaming under my feet. My memory of learning a spot, of coming to know and understand a wave, is usually inseparable from the friend with whom I tried to climb its walls. The compromises and corruption on shore fail to contaminate or alter the joy-drenched, adrenalated play in the ocean. Get the Book Marks Bulletin Email address:. Graphic Novels. Literature in Translation. Story Collections. Investigative Journalism. Social Sciences. True Crime. Lithub Daily. Buy this book on Amazon Highly recommend. Terror and ecstasy ebb and flow around the edges of things, each threatening to overwhelm the dreamer. An unearthly beauty saturates an enormous arena of moving water, latent violence, too-real explosions, and sky. Scenes feel mythic even as they unfold. I always feel a ferocious ambivalence: I want to be nowhere else; I want to be anywhere else. Thus a ten-foot wave is not slightly more powerful than an eight-foot wave—because the leap is not from eight to ten but from sixty-four to a hundred, making it over 50 percent more powerful. It was physical, this postsurf mood, but it had a distinct emotionality too. Sometimes it was mild elation. Often it was a pleasant melancholy. Barbarian Days by William Finnegan: | : Books What The Reviewers Say. I'd sooner press this book upon on a nonsurfer, in part because nothing I've read so accurately describes the feeling of being stoked or the despair of being held under. But also because while it is a book about A Surfing Life — as the subtitle states — it's also about a writer's life and, even more generally, a quester's life, more carefully observed and precisely rendered than any I've read in a long time. Through the sheer intensity of his descriptive powers and the undeniable ways in which surfing has shaped his life, Barbarian Days is an utterly convincing study in the joy of treating seriously an unserious thing Barbarian Days is less an ode to independence than a celebration of deliberate constriction, of making choices that determine what you think about and who you know. As Finnegan demonstrates, surfing, like good writing, is an act of vigilant noticing. There are too many breathtaking, original things in Barbarian Days to do more than mention here — observations about surfing that have simply never been made before, or certainly never so well. Why We Swim. In other words, making something exceedingly difficult look easy. The gift for writing a clean line is rare, and the gift for riding one even rarer. Finnegan possesses both. The author touches on love, on responsibility, on politics, individuality and morality, as well as on the lesser-known aspects of surfing: the toll it takes on the body, the weird lingo, the whacky community. Finnegan recaptures the waves lost and found, the euphoria, the danger…the allure. This summer, New Yorker writer Finnegan recalls his teenage years in the California and Hawaii of the s—when surfing was an escape for loners and outcasts. A delightful storyteller, Finnegan takes readers on a journey from Hawaii to Australia, Fiji, and South Africa, where finding those waves is as challenging as riding them.
Recommended publications
  • THE ECONOMICS of EMPIRE by William Finnegan ROLLTOP
    REGIS DEBRAY: NOUS SOMMES TOUS AMERICAINS HARPER'S MAGAZINE/MAY 2003 $5.95 1,0 -------_._------ THE ECONOMICS OF EMPIRE Notes on the Washington Consensus By William Finnegan -----------. ----------- ROLLTOP MANTRA OF THE OUTER BANKS Creepy but Tranquil in North Carolina By Mark Richard OUR ESSAYS, OURSELVES In Defense of the Big Idea By Cristina Nehring ROMAN BERMAN, MASSAGE THERAPIST A story by David Bezmozgis Also: Mark Slouka and Bill O'Reilly -----------. ----------- REP 0 R T THE ECONOMICS OF EMPIRE Notes on the Washington Consensus By William Finnegan In early March, President Bush, on the verge ·lectual connections with" the terrorists. The Sep- of declaring war on Iraq, was asked at a press con- tember 11 attacks were perpetrated, of course, ference why he thought "so many people around by a genocidal death cult, not by unusually de- the world take a different view of the threat that termined proponents of economic democracy. Saddam Hussein poses than you But what the Bush Adminis- and your allies." Mr. Bush replied, tration is signaling in these mud- "I've seen all kinds of protests dIed formulations (and in many since I've been the president. I less muddled statements-and, remember the protests against for that matter, in many major trade. There was a lot of people policy initiatives) is its transcen- who didn't feel like free trade was dent commitment to a set of fixed good for the world. I completely ideas about international trade, fi- disagree. I think free trade is good nance, politics, and economic de- for both wealthy and impover- velopment.
    [Show full text]
  • Barbarian Days by William Finnegan
    Barbarian Days by William Finnegan Random Notes (DJE) From a review on Amazon by Michael T: Best book on surfing I have read. Yes, he does veer from surfing to explore other aspects of his life, but it all weaves together so seamlessly that it holds the reader's interest throughout. As a contemporary of Finnegan, I found the descriptions of beach life and surfing from his childhood and early adolescence very nostalgic. I felt envy at the experiences he had exploring now famous waves around the world when they were still mostly unknown. This is a masterful piece of writing. His descriptions of the experience of riding a wave are unparalleled in my experience. The personal dimension he brings to the tale, both the people he meets and the conflicts he goes through, brings the story to life. This is a page-turner. I was sad to come to the end. P.18 Surfing always had this horizon, this fear-line, that made it different from other things, certainly from other sports I knew. Everything out there was disturbingly interlaced with everything else. Waves were the playing field. They were the goal. They were the object of your deepest desire and adoration. At the same time, they were your adversary, your nemesis, even your enemy. P. 40 I felt myself floating between two worlds. There was the ocean, effectively infinite, falling away forever to horizon. I was a sunburnt pagan now. I felt privy to mysteries. The other world was land: everything that was not surfing. Books, girls, school, my family, friends who did not surf.
    [Show full text]
  • Surfing, Gender and Politics: Identity and Society in the History of South African Surfing Culture in the Twentieth-Century
    Surfing, gender and politics: Identity and society in the history of South African surfing culture in the twentieth-century. by Glen Thompson Dissertation presented for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy (History) at Stellenbosch University Supervisor: Prof. Albert M. Grundlingh Co-supervisor: Prof. Sandra S. Swart Marc 2015 0 Stellenbosch University https://scholar.sun.ac.za Declaration By submitting this thesis electronically, I declare that the entirety of the work contained therein is my own, original work, that I am the author thereof (unless to the extent explicitly otherwise stated) and that I have not previously in its entirety or in part submitted it for obtaining any qualification. Date: 8 October 2014 Copyright © 2015 Stellenbosch University All rights reserved 1 Stellenbosch University https://scholar.sun.ac.za Abstract This study is a socio-cultural history of the sport of surfing from 1959 to the 2000s in South Africa. It critically engages with the “South African Surfing History Archive”, collected in the course of research, by focusing on two inter-related themes in contributing to a critical sports historiography in southern Africa. The first is how surfing in South Africa has come to be considered a white, male sport. The second is whether surfing is political. In addressing these topics the study considers the double whiteness of the Californian influences that shaped local surfing culture at “whites only” beaches during apartheid. The racialised nature of the sport can be found in the emergence of an amateur national surfing association in the mid-1960s and consolidated during the professionalisation of the sport in the mid-1970s.
    [Show full text]
  • Barbarian Days: a Surfing Life Online
    ke6cx [Read free ebook] Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life Online [ke6cx.ebook] Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life Pdf Free William Finnegan DOC | *audiobook | ebooks | Download PDF | ePub Download Now Free Download Here Download eBook #1992362 in Books 2016-05-17 2016-05-17Formats: Audiobook, CD, UnabridgedOriginal language:EnglishPDF # 15 5.50 x 1.75 x 6.50l, Running time: 18 HoursBinding: Audio CD | File size: 64.Mb William Finnegan : Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life before purchasing it in order to gage whether or not it would be worth my time, and all praised Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life: 96 of 100 people found the following review helpful. Growing Up On The Worldrsquo;s Best WavesBy Esteban EssThe unusual title of this book might lead a prospective reader to think the author is going to talk about the dark side of the people who surf. We have come to associate the word ldquo;barbarianrdquo; with hordes of less civilized people who sack cities and carry off fair maidens. But, a visit to Websterrsquo;s Dictionary will provide you with a meaning more relevant to William Finneganrsquo;s book about the surfing life. Per Websterrsquo;s Dictionary, ldquo;barbarianrdquo; refers to a ldquo;hellip; culture or people alien to, and usually believed to be inferior to another people or culturehellip; ldquo; A Barbarian might be seen as lacking refinement, learning, or artistic or literary culture. ldquo;Barbarian Days A Surfing Liferdquo; can be viewed as a memoir of some fifty years of William Finneganrsquo;s life as a family member, a surfing fanatic, a writer, a world traveler and a Quixotic searcher of new and near perfect waves in remote places around the world; places like Indonesia, Fiji, Bali, and Madeira.
    [Show full text]
  • Coronado Community Read Finalists for 2018
    Coronado Community Read Finalists for 2018 The Coronado Public Library and the Coronado Cultural Arts Commission are proud to announce the six finalists for the 2018 Coronado Community Read. The subcommittee of the Literary Arts working group read through the forty-two titles nominated by the community and has narrowed the field down to these six finalists. Now it’s time for the community to vote for their favorite. The winner will be announced in September. Voting will take place throughout the month of August. Titles are in alphabetical order by author: Ready Player One by Ernest Cline: In the year 2044, reality is an ugly place. The only time teenager Wade Watts really feels alive is when he's jacked into the virtual utopia known as the OASIS. Wade has devoted his life to studying the puzzles hidden within this world's digital confines, puzzles that are based on their creator's obsession with the pop culture of decades past and that promise massive power and fortune to whoever can unlock them. When Wade stumbles upon the first clue, he finds himself beset by players willing to kill to take this ultimate prize. The race is on, and if Wade's going to survive, he'll have to win and confront the real world he's always been so desperate to escape. (Fiction) The House at Sugar Beach by Helene Copper: Helene Cooper a descendant of two Liberian dynasties traced back to the first ship of freemen that set sail from New York in 1820 to found Monrovia. Helene grew up at Sugar Beach, a twenty-two-room mansion by the sea.
    [Show full text]
  • Mexico's Drug Trafficking Organizations
    Mexico’s Drug Trafficking Organizations: Source and Scope of the Rising Violence June S. Beittel Analyst in Latin American Affairs September 7, 2011 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov R41576 CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress Mexico’s Drug Trafficking Organizations: Source and Scope of the Rising Violence Summary The violence generated by Mexico’s drug trafficking organizations (DTOs) in recent years has been unprecedented. In 2006, Mexico’s newly elected President Felipe Calderón launched an aggressive campaign against the DTOs—an initiative that has defined his administration—that has been met with a violent response from the DTOs. Government enforcement efforts have successfully removed some of the key leaders in all of the seven major DTOs, either through arrests or deaths in operations to detain them. However, these efforts have led to succession struggles within the DTOs themselves that generated more violence. According to the Mexican government’s estimate, organized crime-related violence claimed more than 34,500 lives between January 2007 and December 2010. By conservative estimates, there have been an additional 8,000 homicides in 2011 increasing the number of deaths related to organized crime to over 40,000 since President Calderón came to office in late 2006. Although violence has been an inherent feature of the trade in illicit drugs, the character of the drug trafficking-related violence in Mexico has been increasingly brutal. In 2010, several politicians were murdered, including a leading gubernatorial candidate in Tamaulipas and 14 mayors. At least 10 journalists were killed last year and five more were murdered through July 2011.
    [Show full text]
  • Liberian Studies Journal
    2J VOLUME XXVI, 2001 Number 1 LIBERIAN STUDIES JOURNAL LIBERIA 8°N B°N MONSERRADO MARSI B 66N 66N MILES 0 50 MARYLAN GuocrOphr Otporlinen1 10°W VW Urifirsity el Pillsque ilk al Jolmitava Published by THE LIBERIAN STUDIES ASSOCIATION, INC. PDF compression, OCR, web optimization using a watermarked evaluation copy of CVISION PDFCompressor LIBERIAN STUDIES JOURNAL Editorial Policy The Liberian Studies Journal is dedicated to the publication of original research on social, political, economic, scientific, and other issues about Liberia or with implications for Liberia. Opinions of contributors to the Journal do not necessarily reflect the policy of the organizations they represent or the Liberian Studies Association, publishers of the Journal. Manuscript Requirements Manuscripts intended for consideration should not exceed 25 typewritten, double-spaced pages, with margins of one-and-a-half inches. The page limit includes graphs, references, tables and appendices. Authors must, in addition to their manuscripts, submit a computer disk of their work, preferably in WordPerfect 6.1 for Windows. Notes and references should be placed at the end of the text with headings, e.g., Notes; References. Notes, if any, should precede the references. The Journal is published in June and December. Deadline for the first issue is February, and for the second, August. Manuscripts should include a title page that provides the title of the text, author's name, address, phone number, and affiliation. All works will be reviewed by anonymous referees. Manuscripts are accepted in English and French. Manuscripts must conform to the editorial style of either the Chicago Manual of Style (the preferred style), or the American Psychological Association (APA) or Modern Language Association (MLA).
    [Show full text]
  • Pulitzer Prize Winners and Finalists
    WINNERS AND FINALISTS 1917 TO PRESENT TABLE OF CONTENTS Excerpts from the Plan of Award ..............................................................2 PULITZER PRIZES IN JOURNALISM Public Service ...........................................................................................6 Reporting ...............................................................................................24 Local Reporting .....................................................................................27 Local Reporting, Edition Time ..............................................................32 Local General or Spot News Reporting ..................................................33 General News Reporting ........................................................................36 Spot News Reporting ............................................................................38 Breaking News Reporting .....................................................................39 Local Reporting, No Edition Time .......................................................45 Local Investigative or Specialized Reporting .........................................47 Investigative Reporting ..........................................................................50 Explanatory Journalism .........................................................................61 Explanatory Reporting ...........................................................................64 Specialized Reporting .............................................................................70
    [Show full text]
  • R^ Politics Editor-In-Chief: Dankwart A
    Bureaucracy, Economy, and Leadership in China The Institutional Origins of the Great Leap Forward David Bachman In this book David Bachman examines the origins of the Great Leap Forward (GLF), a program of economic reform that must be considered one of the great tragedies of Communist China, estimated to have caused the death of between 14 and 28 million Chinese. Bachman proposes a https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms provocative reinterpretation of the origins of the GLF that stresses the role of the bureaucracy. 40275-1 Hardcover $42.95 Political Participation and Democracy in Britain Geraint Parry, George Moyser and Neil Day Why do some people involve themselves in politics and others not? Which issues are they most concerned with? Answering such questions is fundamental to under- standing political life and the workings of democracy. This book presents the results of one of the most extensive surveys ever undertaken on the levels and patterns of political participation in Britain. , subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at 33298-2 Hardcover $84.95 33602-3 Paper $34.95 Elites and Democratic Consolidation in Latin America and Southern Europe John Higley and Richard Gunther, Editors 25 Sep 2021 at 13:26:22 Employing a framework that focuses on , on the actions and choices of elites in creating consolidated democracies, a distinguished Power and Policy in group of scholars examines Argentina, Liberal Democracies Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Martin Harrop, Editor 170.106.35.93 Dominican Republic, Italy, Mexico, Peru, The authors examine power and policy in Portugal, Spain, Uruguay, and Venezuela.
    [Show full text]
  • Fifth Annual Rancho Mirage Writers Festival at the Rancho Mirage Library & Observatory
    FIFTH ANNUAL RANCHO MIRAGE WRITERS FESTIVAL AT THE RANCHO MIRAGE LIBRARY & OBSERVATORY JANUARY 24–26, 2018 Welcome to the RANCHO MIRAGE WRITERS FESTIVAL! We are celebrating year FIVE of this exciting Festival in 2018! This is where readers meet authors and authors get to know their enthusiastic readers. We dedicate all that happens at this incredible gathering to you, our Angels and our Readers. The Rancho Mirage Writers Festival has a special energy level, driven by ideas and your enthusiasm for what will feel like a pop-up university where the written word and those who write have brought us together in a most appropriate venue — the Rancho Mirage Library and Observatory. The Festival starts fast and never lets up as our individual presenters and panels are eager to share their words and their thoughts. The excitement of books. David Bryant Jamie Kabler In 2013 we began to design the Rancho Mirage Writers Festival. Our Steering Committee kept its objective LIBRARY DIRECTOR FESTIVAL FOUNDER important and clear — to bring authors, their books, and our readers together in this beautiful resort city. In 2018 our mission remains the same, though the Festival has grown and gets even better this year. The writers you read and the books that get us thinking and talking converge at the Festival to make January in the Desert, not only key to our season, but a centerpiece of our cultural life. The Festival is a celebration of the written word. The Festival lives in our award-winning Library. Recent investments in the Library include: Welcome • Windows in the John Steinbeck Room and the Jack London Room that can be darkened electronically making for a better presenter/audience experience.
    [Show full text]
  • Making Sense of Pakistan.Indb
    SSOVIETOVIET FFATESATES AANDND LLOSTOST AALTERNATIVESLTERNATIVES CC5079.indb5079.indb i 44/20/09/20/09 22:08:03:08:03 PPMM CC5079.indb5079.indb iiii 44/20/09/20/09 22:08:03:08:03 PPMM SOVIET FATES AND LOST ALTERNATIVES FFROMROM SSTALINISMTALINISM TTOO TTHEHE NNEWEW CCOLDOLD WWARAR stephen f. cohen columbia university press New York CC5079.indb5079.indb iiiiii 44/20/09/20/09 22:08:03:08:03 PPMM columbia university press publishers since 1893 new york chichester, west sussex Copyright © 2009 Columbia University Press All rights reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Cohen, Stephen F. Soviet fates and lost alternatives : from Stalinism to the new Cold War / Stephen F. Cohen. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 978-0-231-14896-2 (cloth : alk. paper)—isbn 978-0-231-52042-3 (e-book) 1. Soviet Union—History—1925–1953. 2. Soviet Union—History—1953–1985. 3. Soviet Union—History—1985–1991. 4. Soviet Union—Politics and government. 5. Concentration camp inmates—Soviet Union. 6. Cold War. 7. Gorbachev, Mikhail Sergeevich, 1931– —Political and social views. 8. Post communism—Russia (Federation) 9. Russia (Federation)—Foreign relations—United States. 10. United States—Foreign relations—Russia (Federation) I. Title. dk266.c587 2009 947.084 —dc22 2009000659 Columbia University Press books are printed on permanent and durable acid-free paper. This book is printed on paper with recycled content. Printed in the United States of America c 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 References to Internet Web sites (URLs) were accurate at the time of writing.
    [Show full text]
  • November Issue Of
    Share this: November 2016 | Volume 11 | Number 9 Biography Beyond Borders Save the Date for the 2017 Brings Together US and BIO Conference! European Biographers Join us in Boston on May 19–21, 2017, for the Eighth Annual BIO On November 4-5, BIO and the Oxford Centre for Life-Writing co-sponsored Conference at Emerson College, Biography Beyond Borders, a colloquium on American and European biography. in the beautiful Back Bay The weekend in Oxford and London featured 29 distinguished biographers from neighborhood. We’re returning to across the United States and Europe examining their craft in lectures and panel the city where we held our first discussions. TBC consulting editor James McGrath Morris sent us these photos conference, and we’ll once again of the weekend; look for a more detailed report in the December issue. offer an informative array of panelists and speakers, along with the opportunity to meet and socialize with other biographers. open in browser PRO version Are you a developer? Try out the HTML to PDF API pdfcrowd.com Watch for details in future issues of TBC and in your mailbox. From the Editor I have a confession that will not raise my esteem among BIO members: Before taking over as editor of TBC, I wasn’t a regular reader of the New York Times Book Review (probably because I knew I would never see one of my books reviewed there or included on the best-seller lists). That’s changed, Carla Kaplan opened the weekend on Hermione Lee spoke during lunch of course, and I while I can’t admit November 4 with a talk on the life of on November 5.
    [Show full text]