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The Unpunished Vice: A Life of Reading

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Overview

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’I find it impossible to imagine anyone better read than White … Wisdom and a certain kind of tenderness are to be found on every page’ - Observer


’One of the great prose stylists of our time … There are few paragraphs that pass by without an illuminating, wise or funny comment’ - Tim Smith-Laing, Daily Telegraph


’A rallying cry for the pleasures of reading ... The best writers are energetic readers, constantly diving for buried treasure. Anyone who encounters this book is likely to emerge with something new and gleaming’ - Financial Times
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Edmund White made his name as a writer, but he remembers his life through the books he read. For White, each momentous occasion came with books to match: Proust’s Remembrance of Things Past, which opened up the seemingly closed world of homosexuality; the Ezra Pound poems adored by a lover he followed to New York; the biography of Stephen Crane that inspired one of White’s novels.

White’s larger-than-life presence on the literary scene lends itself to fascinating, intimate insights into the lives of some of the world’s best-loved cultural figures. Blending memoir and literary criticism, The Unpunished Vice is a sensitive, smart account of a life in literature.

An insightful account of the key role reading has played in the life of literary icon Edmund White

Critically-acclaimed author of Our Young Man (2016), The Flaneur (2001), Jack Holmes and His Friend (2012) and many more
White has written three autobiographical novels, but this is his first autobiographical book to examine how reading has shaped his life - with unparalleled insights into the literary world

I find it impossible to imagine anyone better read than White … Wisdom and a certain kind of tenderness are to be found on every page

White is above all else a writer’s writer: one of the great prose stylists of our time ... An afternoon stroll with a Grade-A literary flâneur … There are few paragraphs that pass by without an illuminating, wise or funny comment

As a peerless chronicler and interpreter of gay American life before, during and after the age of Aids, as a connoisseur of French (and so much other) literature and as a Princeton professor of creative writing, White never lost touch with that spirit of antic mischief … Much more fun – and more surprising – than a leisurely ramble through favourite works by a 78-year-old giant of letters has any right to be

Praise for Edmund White

A writer blessed with ... [an] elusive gift, and it should probably be called wisdom

His writing finds itself echoing Proust ... Since the publication of A Boy’s Own Story thirty years ago, [White’s] own prose style has hardly aged a day

Edmund White is one of the best writers of my generation; he’s certainly the contemporary American writer I reread more than any other, and the one whose next book I look forward to reading most

White’s prose is a series of slaps to the face, filled with reckless energy

White simply does it better than most

One of America’s pre-eminent men of letters ... White’s great achievement lies in his never holding back

Edmund White tells such a good story that I’m ready to to listen to anything he wants to talk about

He never descends to savage satire. This open-heartedness, an essential White quality, makes his writing sparkle with generosityEvery detail is alive and gleaming … It is also a book that floats above things, so light is its touch, so playful and joyous its execution

Edmund White is one of America’s preeminent twentieth-century writers. His fiction, essays, biography, and journalism explore the gay experience in the United States, from the closeted 1950s to the AIDS crisis. His autobiographical novel, A Boy’s Own Story (1982), is a classic coming-of-age tale that cemented his place as a fiction author. White’s works have earned and been shortlisted for numerous honors, including the National Book Critics Circle Award, which he received for the biography Genet in 1993. White has also received the PEN/Saul Bellow and Publishing Triangle’s Bill Whitehead Awards for Lifetime Achievement and is the namesake of the organization’s Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction. He is a professor of creative writing at Princeton University’s Lewis Center for the Arts.

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    $19.60

    The publisher has not made this resource available for purchase in your country or region.