Carol Ann Shields was an American-born Canadian author. She is best known for her successful 1993 novel The Stone Diaries, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction as well as the Governor General's Award. Her novel Swann won the Best Novel Arthur Ellis Award in 1988.
Amazon.com
It's a perennial source of frustration to Jane Austen's admirers that so little is known about her quiet existence as an unmarried woman seeking an outlet for her ferocious intelligence in genteel, rural England at the turn of the 19th century. Carol Shields, who won a Pulitzer Prize in 1995 for The Stone Diaries, has already proved herself a writer who can convey large truths with an economical amount of material, which makes her an excellent choice as Austen's biographer. Shields's brief but cogent text makes persuasive connections between Austen's novels and her life (the plethora of unsatisfactory mothers, for example, and the obvious sympathy for women barred from marriage by poverty and from careers by social custom), but she never forgets that fiction expresses first and foremost an artist's response to the world around her, not actual personal history. In fact, Shields argues, it may well have been Austen's sense that the novels she loved to read didn't provide a very accurate picture of the society she knew that fired her own work. Her merciless portraits of the economic underpinnings of marriage and family relations are in many ways more "realistic" than male writers' dramas of battle or females' fantasies of romantic bliss. As for her life's lack of incident, its one major disruption--her parents' move to Bath--prompted a nine-year silence from their formerly prolific daughter. Shields gleans as much as she can from Austen's letters, while remembering that they too gave voice to a persona, not the whole truth, in order to delineate a quirky, sometimes cranky, sometimes catty woman who was by no means the perfect maiden lady her surviving relatives sought to immortalize. An Austen biography will never be as much fun as an Austen novel, but Shields does a remarkably entertaining job of discerning the links between the two. --Wendy Smith --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Publishers Weekly
Penguin's wonderful series of "lives," biographies unique in their manageable length and careful pairing of subjects with authors who are themselves important creative figures, delights once again, this time with a pithy literary biography of Jane Austen by Pulitzer Prize-winning fiction writer Shields (The Stone Diaries; Dressing Up for the Carnival etc.). With frankness, warmth and grace, Shields writes of an "opaque" subject who lived a short life and about whom very little is known beyond family letters. "Jane Austen belongs to the nearly unreachable past," Shields notes. There is no diary, no photograph, no voice recording of her; her life was filled with lengthy "silences," notably a nearly 10-year "bewildering" period starting in 1800, when Austen, unmarried and in her mid-20s, moved with her family from rural Stevenson to the more urban Bath. This period also "drives a wedge between her first three major novels and her final three: Mansfield Park, Emma, and Persuasion" and suggests Austen's "reconciliation to the life she had been handed... in a day when to be married was the only form of independence." Shields is especially interested in the sisterly relations between Jane and the "subsuming," older Cassandra, as "each sister's life invaded the other, canceling out parts of the knowable self." The insularity evident in their letters to each other reveals something puzzling about Austen herself. She is relatively provincial and inexperienced in matters both social and sexual, yet conveys a "trenchant, knowing glance" throughout her novels. Shields seems to conclude that of the two sets of writings--the private letters and the published novels--the novels themselves offer the greater insight into Austen's artful imagination and shrewdly judgmental character. (Feb. 19)Forecast: Recent film versions of Austen's novels have revived public interest in this classic writer. With Shield's high-profile name also on the cover, sales should be strong and steady
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
發表於2024-11-23
Jane Austen 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
“她留給我們的,不是一份關於過去某個時代的社會報告,而是對人性睿智而令人信服的解讀。她筆下的男男女女,訴說著自己的渴望,也闡述著那些妨礙自己活得平靜和滿足的障礙。今天,他們的渴望,如同兩百年前她第一次賦予他們生命時一樣,依舊旺盛如初。” 奧斯丁是我最喜愛的...
評分“她留給我們的,不是一份關於過去某個時代的社會報告,而是對人性睿智而令人信服的解讀。她筆下的男男女女,訴說著自己的渴望,也闡述著那些妨礙自己活得平靜和滿足的障礙。今天,他們的渴望,如同兩百年前她第一次賦予他們生命時一樣,依舊旺盛如初。” 奧斯丁是我最喜愛的...
評分我十三歲的時候,第一次聽二十一歲的簡.奧斯丁給我講《傲慢與偏見》。確確實實是用心聽完的。那時每天中午放學後飛車迴傢,一邊吃飯一邊聽收音機裏的小說連播,就是孫緻禮的譯林版,也是我一直認為最好的中譯本。此後十幾年,讀奧斯丁變成瞭一種習慣,什麼時候想念瞭就拿起一本...
評分我在學校圖書館找到《傲慢與偏見》的時候,它掉頁、泛黃,還有破損和汙漬。是的,這本小說年頭久遠,版本多樣,但是我能找到的隻有這一版,在人大的圖書館裏。你不能指望在這樣一所女生眾多的文科學校裏,它能帶著無人問津的傲驕的簇新。翻看這本講簡•奧斯丁自己的《簡•...
評分“她留給我們的,不是一份關於過去某個時代的社會報告,而是對人性睿智而令人信服的解讀。她筆下的男男女女,訴說著自己的渴望,也闡述著那些妨礙自己活得平靜和滿足的障礙。今天,他們的渴望,如同兩百年前她第一次賦予他們生命時一樣,依舊旺盛如初。” 奧斯丁是我最喜愛的...
圖書標籤: Jane·Austen 英文原版書 英文傳記 奧斯汀 加拿大作傢 簡·奧斯汀 傳記 eng
以奧斯丁的六部小說為綫索的傳記。今天讀完瞭,該專心讀文學史瞭。
評分a short but interesting biography, though the last chapter was probably coming from the author's thesis :)
評分beautifully weaved with love
評分a short but interesting biography, though the last chapter was probably coming from the author's thesis :)
評分以奧斯丁的六部小說為綫索的傳記。今天讀完瞭,該專心讀文學史瞭。
Jane Austen 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載