Книга: Sherwood Anderson «Sherwood Anderson: Selected Short Stories»
Творчество классика американской литературы XX века Шервуда Андерсона оказало влияние на формирование таких мастеров американской прозы, как Хемингуэй, Стейнбек, Фолкнер. Своеобразие Андерсона-художника наиболее ярко проявилось в малых формах. Представленные здесь лучшие образцы новеллистики Андерсона (из сборников "Уайнсбург", "Люди и лошади", "Торжество яйца", "Смерть в лесу" ) отличаются тонкостью психологического анализа, раскрывают трагизм будничного существования рядового американца. Сборник сопровождается вступительной статьей и комментариями к тексту и рассчитан на всех читающих по-английски. Издательство: "Прогресс" (1981) Формат: 84x108/32, 352 стр.
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Книга | Описание | Год | Цена | Тип книги |
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Marching Men | — Public Domain, электронная книга Подробнее... | электронная книга | ||
Winesburg, Ohio: A Group of Tales of Ohio Small Town Life | — Public Domain, электронная книга Подробнее... | электронная книга | ||
Poor White | — Public Domain, электронная книга Подробнее... | электронная книга | ||
Windy McPherson's Son | — Public Domain, электронная книга Подробнее... | электронная книга | ||
Triumph of the Egg, and Other Stories | — Public Domain, электронная книга Подробнее... | электронная книга | ||
Winesburg Ohio | Воспроизведено в оригинальной авторской орфографии издания 1919 года (издательство `New York`). ISBN:978-5-8739-3266-5 — Книга по Требованию, Подробнее... | бумажная книга |
Sherwood Anderson
Infobox Writer
name = Sherwood Anderson
birthname =
caption = Anderson in 1933
birthdate = birth date|1876|9|13|mf=y
birthplace = Camden,
deathdate = death date and age|1941|3|8|1876|9|13
deathplace =
occupation =
movement =
notableworks = "Winesburg, Ohio
influences =
influenced =
Sherwood Anderson (September 13, 1876 – March 8, 1941) was an American writer, mainly of short stories, most notably the collection "Winesburg, Ohio". That work's influence on American fiction was profound [ [http://www.bookrags.com/research/anderson-sherwood-1876-1941-sjpc-01/ Anderson, Sherwood (1876-1941) | St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture Summary ] ] , and its literary voice can be heard in
Early life
Anderson was born in
Partly as a result of these misfortunes, young Sherwood found various odd jobs to help his family, which earned him the nickname "Jobby." He left school at age 14.
Anderson moved to Chicago near his brother Karl's home and worked as a manual laborer until near the turn of the century, when he enlisted in the
In 1904, he married Cornelia Lane, the daughter of a wealthy Ohio family. He fathered three children while living in
In November 1912 he suffered a mental breakdown and disappeared for four days. Soon after, he left his position as president of the Anderson Manufacturing Co. in Elyria, Ohio, and left his wife and three small children [http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/a/sherwood-anderson/ About Sherwood Anderson] to pursue the writer's life of creativity. Anderson described the entire episode as "escaping from his materialistic existence," which garnered praise from many young writers, who used his "courage" as an example.
Anderson moved back to Chicago, working again for a publishing and advertising company. In 1916, he divorced Lane and married Tennessee Mitchell.
Novelist
Anderson's first novel, "Windy McPherson's Son", was published in 1916. Three years later, his second major work, "Marching Men", was published. However, he is most famous for his collection of interrelated short stories, which he began writing in 1919, known as "Winesburg, Ohio". He claimed that "Hands", the opening story, was the first "real" story he ever wrote. His themes are comparable to those of
Although his short stories were very successful, Anderson felt the need to write novels. In 1920, he published "
In 1923, Anderson published "
Beginning in 1924, Anderson lived in the historic Pontalba Apartments (540-B St. Peter Street) adjoining Jackson Square in
Another remarriage
Anderson's third marriage also failed, and he married Eleanor Copenhaver in the late 1920s. They traveled and often studied together. In the 1930s, Anderson published "Death in the Woods", "Puzzled America" (a book of essays), and "Kit Brandon", which was published in 1936.
Anderson dedicated his 1932 novel, "Beyond Desire", to Copenhaver. Although he was much less influential in this final writing period, many of his more significant lines of
Death
Anderson died in
Anderson's final home, known as Ripshin, still stands in
Works
* "Windy McPherson's Son", (1916, novel)
* "Marching Men", (1917, novel)
* "Winesburg, Ohio", (1919, novel)
* "
* "Triumph of the Egg", (1921, short stories)
* "
* "Horses and Men", (1923, short stories)
* "A Story-Teller's Story", (1924, semi-autobiographical novel)
* "Sherwood Anderson's Memoirs", (1924, memoirs)
* "An Exhibition of Paintings By Alfred H. Maurer", (1924, non-fiction)
* "
* "A Meeting South", (1925, novel)
* "Modern Writer", (1925, non-fiction)
* "Tar: A Midwest Childhood", (1926, semi-autobiographical novel)
* "Sherwood Anderson's Notebook", (1926, memoirs)
* "Hello Towns", (1929, short stories)
* "Alice: The Lost Novel", (1929, novel)
* "Onto Being Published", (1930, non-fiction)
* "Beyond Desire", (1932, novel)
* "
* "Puzzled America", (1935, essays)
* "Kit Brandon", (1936, novel)
* "Dreiser: A Biography", (1936, non-fiction)
* "Winesburg and Others", (1937, play)
* "Home Town", (1940, novel)
* "San Francisco at Christmas", (1940, memoirs)
* "Lives of Animals", (1966, novel)
* "Return to Winesburg, Ohio", (1967, essays)
* "The Memoirs of Sherwood Anderson", (1968, memoirs)
* "No Swank", (1970, novel)
* "Perhaps Women", (1970, novel)
* "The Buck Fever Papers", (1971, essays)
* "Ten Short Plays", (1972, plays)
* "Sherwood Anderson and Gertrude Stein: Correspondence and Personal Essays", (1972, essays)
* "Nearer the Grass Roots", (1976, novel)
* "The Writer at His Craft", (1978, non-fiction)
* "Paul Rosenfeld: Voyager in the Arts", (1978, nonfiction)
* "The Teller's Tale", (1982, novel)
* "Selected Letters: 1916 – 1933", (1984, letters)
* "Writer's Diary: 1936 - 1941", (1987, memoir)
* "Early Writings of Sherwood Anderson", (1989, short stories)
* "Love Letters to Eleanor Copenhaver Anderson", (1990, letters)
* "The Selected Short Stories of Sherwood Anderson", (1995, short stories)
* "Southern Odyssey: Selected Writings By Sherwood Anderson", (1998, short stories)
References
*Citation | last=Cox | first=Leland H., Jr. | contribution=Sherwood Anderson | title=American Writers in Paris, 1920–1939 | volume=4 | series =
External links
*gutenberg author|id=Sherwood_Anderson|name=Sherwood Anderson
* [http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty-a-m.html#anderson Works by Sherwood Anderson] at [http://gutenberg.net.au Project Gutenberg Australia]
* [http://www.gradesaver.com/ClassicNotes/Authors/about_sherwood_anderson.html Sherwood Anderson Biography]
* [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Janderson.htm Sherwood Anderson Biography 2]
* [http://virtual.clemson.edu/groups/dial/sherwood.htm Sherwood Anderson in the Dial]
* [http://www.bbk.ac.uk/english/pages/eking08 Anderson and The Dial environment 1922]
* [http://www.geocities.com/duanesimolke/SherwoodAnderson.html Sherwood Anderson Links]
* [http://www.amlit.com/winesburg/chap0.html Winesburg, Ohio at American Literature]
* [http://www.shortstoryarchive.com/a/sherwood_anderson.html Sherwood Anderson Short Stories]
Источник: Sherwood Anderson
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Sherwood Anderson — Portrait de Sherwood Anderson par Carl van Vechten (1933) Sherwood Anderson est un romancier américain (13 septembre 1876, Camden, Ohio 8 mars 1941, Panama), surtout connu pour ses nouvelles, notamment le recueil Winesburg, Ohio … Wikipédia en Français
Death in the Woods — 1st edition (publ. Liveright) Death in the Woods is a short story by Sherwood Anderson first published in 1924 and reprinted in 1933. Death in the Woods is a retelling of events from the narrator s childhood, as he attempts to explain a death and … Wikipedia
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