The first critical study of William Styron since his death in 2006, Rereading William Styron offers an eloquent reflection on the writer’s works, world, and character. Bringing an innovative approach to literary criticism, Gavin Cologne-Brookes combines personal anecdote, scholarly research, travel writing, and primary material to provide fresh perspectives on Styron’s achievements. For Cologne-Brookes, rereading unfolds in two ways: through close analysis of texts, and through remembrance. He begins with reminiscences about the man behind the books and then, giving due consideration to Styron’s stories, incidental writings, and posthumous publications, interprets anew all his significant work—from the nonfiction, including his acclaimed...
Periodically a call is issued from academic circles to reread the works of Boris Vian, whose name ha...
A controlling assumption among critics of Southern literature today seems to be that the Southern R...
In his 2005 monograph on The Author, Andrew Bennett reflects on how “authorship is central to the wa...
Born in Newport News, William Styron has become one of the South\u27s and the nation\u27s leading wr...
In 1967, the American novelist William Styron published his third major work of fiction, a book enti...
The controversy surrounding William Styron\u27s 1967 novel, The Confessions of Nat Turner, is compli...
Sophie's Choice (1979), William Styron's autobiographical novel, deals, like his other works, with t...
Sophie's Choice (1979), William Styron's autobiographical novel, deals, like his other works, with t...
The article examines critical responses to Styron’s controversial novel Sophie’s Choice, and argues ...
William Styron\u27s Confessions of Nat Turner depicts a fictitious characterization of the historica...
This paper, then, purposes to examine these two characteristics of Styron's novel form--structure an...
In Lie Down in Darkness, The Long March and Set This House on Fire. William Styron studies the moder...
The Confessions of Nat Turner (1967), William Styron's fourth novel, is written, like most of his ot...
This study examines Algernon Charles Swinburne’s work as a critic and creator of prose fiction, argu...
This dissertation reads Wallace Stegner's Angle of Repose by combining objective and subjective crit...
Periodically a call is issued from academic circles to reread the works of Boris Vian, whose name ha...
A controlling assumption among critics of Southern literature today seems to be that the Southern R...
In his 2005 monograph on The Author, Andrew Bennett reflects on how “authorship is central to the wa...
Born in Newport News, William Styron has become one of the South\u27s and the nation\u27s leading wr...
In 1967, the American novelist William Styron published his third major work of fiction, a book enti...
The controversy surrounding William Styron\u27s 1967 novel, The Confessions of Nat Turner, is compli...
Sophie's Choice (1979), William Styron's autobiographical novel, deals, like his other works, with t...
Sophie's Choice (1979), William Styron's autobiographical novel, deals, like his other works, with t...
The article examines critical responses to Styron’s controversial novel Sophie’s Choice, and argues ...
William Styron\u27s Confessions of Nat Turner depicts a fictitious characterization of the historica...
This paper, then, purposes to examine these two characteristics of Styron's novel form--structure an...
In Lie Down in Darkness, The Long March and Set This House on Fire. William Styron studies the moder...
The Confessions of Nat Turner (1967), William Styron's fourth novel, is written, like most of his ot...
This study examines Algernon Charles Swinburne’s work as a critic and creator of prose fiction, argu...
This dissertation reads Wallace Stegner's Angle of Repose by combining objective and subjective crit...
Periodically a call is issued from academic circles to reread the works of Boris Vian, whose name ha...
A controlling assumption among critics of Southern literature today seems to be that the Southern R...
In his 2005 monograph on The Author, Andrew Bennett reflects on how “authorship is central to the wa...