Afbeelding van de auteur.

Hortense Calisher (1911–2009)

Auteur van Sunday Jews

32+ Werken 607 Leden 7 Besprekingen Favoriet van 2 leden

Over de Auteur

Hortense Calisher, 1911-2009 Author Hortense Calisher was born in Manhattan, New York on December 20, 1911. She graduated from Barnard College in 1932 with a degree in English composition. Before becoming a writer, she worked as a sales clerk, a model, and a social worker. She wrote a total of 23 toon meer novels and short story collections during her lifetime including In the Absence of Angels (1951), False Entry (1961), Tale for the Mirror (1962), Textures of Life (1963), The New Yorkers (1969), and Sunday Jews (2002). Her memoir, Herself, an exploration of the intersection between a writer's life and her fiction, was published in 1972. Many of her short works have been anthologized and she is a contributor of short stories, articles and reviews to the New York Times, Harpers and other journals. She also lectured on literature and taught creative writing at several colleges and universities including Columbia University and Bennington College in Vermont. She received four Henry Awards and two Guggenheim Fellowships. She died on January 13, 2009 at the age of 97. (Bowker Author Biography) toon minder

Werken van Hortense Calisher

Sunday Jews (2002) 155 exemplaren
The Best American Short Stories 1981 (1981) — Redacteur — 35 exemplaren
The New Yorkers (1969) 32 exemplaren
Herself, An Autobiographical Work (1972) 29 exemplaren
Age (1987) 27 exemplaren
False Entry (1961) 23 exemplaren
Kissing Cousins: A Memory (1988) 21 exemplaren
Tattoo for a Slave (2004) 20 exemplaren
Journal from Ellipsia (1965) 18 exemplaren
Standard Dreaming (1972) 18 exemplaren
On Keeping Women (1977) 16 exemplaren
Queenie (1972) 16 exemplaren
Textures of Life (1963) 15 exemplaren
The Bobby-Soxer: A Novel (1986) 13 exemplaren
Extreme Magic (1963) 13 exemplaren
Mysteries of Motion (1983) 12 exemplaren
Eagle eye (1973) 11 exemplaren
Tale for the Mirror (1960) 9 exemplaren
In the Palace of the Movie King (1994) 6 exemplaren
from JOURNAL FROM ELLIPSIA (1965) 3 exemplaren
A century at Yaddo (2000) 2 exemplaren
Heartburn 2 exemplaren
Saratoga, hot (1985) 2 exemplaren
Der Eindringling (1967) 1 exemplaar
Trama di vita. (1966) 1 exemplaar

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The Treasury of American Short Stories (1981) — Medewerker — 268 exemplaren
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The Paris Review 167 2003 Fall (2003) — Medewerker — 12 exemplaren
Moderne Amerikaanse verhalen (1982) — Medewerker — 9 exemplaren
The Best American Short Stories 1951 (1951) — Medewerker — 6 exemplaren
The Best American Short Stories 1952 (1952) — Medewerker — 5 exemplaren
Modern Fiction About Schoolteaching: An Anthology (1995) — Medewerker — 4 exemplaren
Moderne Amerikaanse verhalen — Medewerker — 3 exemplaren
Antaeus No. 21/22, Spring/Summer 1976 - Special Essay Issue (1976) — Medewerker — 3 exemplaren
Ett skri ur mörkret — Medewerker — 2 exemplaren
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Tagged

Algemene kennis

Gangbare naam
Calisher, Hortense
Geboortedatum
1911-12-20
Overlijdensdatum
2009-01-13
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
Manhattan, New York, USA
Plaats van overlijden
Manhattan, New York, USA
Woonplaatsen
Nyack, New York, USA
Opleiding
Barnard College(1932)
Hunter College High School
Beroepen
professor
novelist
short story writer
sales clerk
model
social worker (toon alle 7)
memoirist
Relaties
Harnack, Curtis (second husband)
Organisaties
American Academy of Arts and Letters (Literature, 1977| President, 1987-1990)
PEN (president, 1986-1987)
Prijzen en onderscheidingen
Guggenheim Fellowship (1952, 1956)
American Academy of Arts and Letters Academy Award (Literature, 1967)
Korte biografie
Hortense Calisher was born to a Jewish family in New York City. She attended Hunter College High School and graduated from Barnard College with a major in English and a minor in philosophy. It was the height of the Great Depression, and she went to work for the New York Department of Public Welfare as a social worker. In 1935, she married Heaton Heffelfinger, an engineer, with whom she had two children. She won an O. Henry Award for her first published story, “The Middle Drawer,”which appeared in The New Yorker in 1948. Three years later, she published her first book of stories, In the Absence of Angels, which established her reputation. She won two Guggenheim Fellowships (1952 and 1955), and in 1956–1957, became an adjunct professor of English at Barnard College. This was the first of more than a dozen adjunct or visiting professorships she held. In 1959, after a divorce from her first husband, she remarried to fellow writer Curtis Harnack. Her first novel, False Entry, was published in 1961. She produced a total of 23 novels and short story collections
during her career, as well as several memoirs, including Herself (1972), a mix of reminiscences, essays, reviews, and musings. Her best-known book is Sunday Jews (2002). She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters and became its second female president in 1987.

Leden

Discussies

Hortense Calisher, 1911 - 2009 in Authors In Memoriam (januari 2009)

Besprekingen

Here's what I wrote in 2008 about this read: "Interesting book. Family's matriach (Zipporah Zangwill, that's name for you!) recounts the life of herself and beloved first husband, and then moves forward. Family gathers together each week, across generations."
 
Gemarkeerd
MGADMJK | Feb 14, 2023 |
This is a really interesting work of literary science fiction from the early 1980s. I missed it at the time, and I'm sorry I did.

The basic premise of this novel is that, at a not clearly stated time possibly in the early 21st century, the US is sending a crew of civilians to a habitat/colony at the L5 LaGrange point between the Earth and the Sun. It's the first time civilians have been sent to a space station as potential colonists, and due to a years-long campaign by wealthy guerrilla journalist (today he'd be a blogger) Tom Gilpin, it is at least in theory a first exercise in including the whole range of humanity, rather than just a super-fit, elite subset.

We meet the inhabitants of one cabin, a relatively elite group although not your obvious choices for First Space Colonists. They include Tom Gilpin himself, his old friend and collaborator Veronica Oliphant, industrial magnate John Mulenberg, former diplomat and current leading international businessman William Wert, Wert's Iranian wife Soraya, and the man with two names, Wulf Lievering/Jacques Cohen. Lievering/Cohen is not deceiving anyone; he's been living and working openly under both names, and each of the passengers assigned to the same cabin have been given complete access to each other's biographies. Lievering/Cohen has been a poet, a professor of literature, a translator, and other things along the way.

And then there's one of the few crew members who spends significant time with them, Fred Kim, son of an internationally famous architect who's done significant work for NASA. Except he's not Fred Kim; he's really Mole Perdue, son of the NASA admiral in charge of this project.

Mole smuggled himself aboard because he's deeply suspicious and concerned about the fact that his father told his friend Fred's father to keep Fred grounded until the second trip.

Calisher, whose writing career stretched from 1951 to 2009, practiced a complex, ornate style of story telling that wasn't in favor in the seventies and eighties, but may be more welcome today. We get the complex interleaving of the characters' stories, non-linear, detailed, and intricate. The story builds up layer by layer, as we learn the good, the bad, and the ugly of all the principal characters. No one is a mere spear-carrier.

A really, really interesting read.

Recommended.

I received a free electronic galley from the publisher via NetGalley.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
LisCarey | Sep 19, 2018 |
What a difficult book. I feel like there is knowledge and insight to be gained in these pages --somewhere-- but it's simply not given up easily enough. I mean, I like obscure memoirs, but this one isn't worth the effort to finish.

The book recalls memories associated with cousin Katie. But in the parts that I read we get more of the conflict that can exist when you are a Southern Jew in the North. In an extended family of blonds and brunettes, light and swarthy complexions, there's the opportunity for lots of conflict. Southern-ness versus Northern-ness versus different flavors of Jewish-ness.

This should have been more interesting read than it was.

And part of the problem was the language.

My image of our house was that it reverberated
with sounds that had to be classified, and that this
was society.


There is meaning here, just not enough to make it worth transliterating this verbiage into something worth thinking about.

But Physics was more like our own household,
full of closets that scarcely knew any longer what
they held, in whose depths I could spend an after-
noon with the concrete.


What it could have been is pages filled with the tantalizing hints of life, but Hortense passes by these too quickly. Like the cousins who were trying to pass themselves off as Christian. Or the puzzle she found in the big leatherbound family Bible.

... a receipt, issued to my grandfather for insurance
on a slave, that made me queasy, since according to my
father our grandmother had never kept any servants
except the freed. Perhaps my grandfather, of whom I
knew only the severe space between nose and mouth in
his mutton-chopped portrait, had been of another mind.


And there are just these quick snippets before we jolt ahead to another unrelated paragraph.
.
I so wanted to be fair in evaluating and considering this short memoir, however things like "another cheeseparing burden of the verbal" kept me from finishing. Sigh.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
PamFamilyLibrary | Dec 30, 2016 |
The subject - fathers and sons, mothers and daughters - seems simple enough. But under Calisher's hands it becomes more complex, a beautiful tapestry. In an ornate, near voluptuous style reminiscent of Henry James, she spins a story of newlyweds David and Elizabeth. Both are artists, at least in spirit, and represent the artistic life in New York City in the late fifties, early sixties. The story covers only about four years, but in that time these two come up against the realities of daily living and the responsibilities of adulthood, and parenthood too, after their daughter May is born. They have found what they think is the perfect abode in a loft in an old converted piano factory and they design and remodel the space to suit their needs and temperaments. But this "blue heaven" space turns out to harbor a deadly threat to their baby, A nearly invisible dust rising up from the stoneworks on the lower level exacerbates little May's hidden asthma, causing periodic seizures and life-threatening attacks. A subtext, or parallel story, concerns that of their parents, both widowed, who marry each other. David's father, Nicholas, has a heart condition and has lived a careful, almost precarious life for a dozen years or so. When he marries Elizabeth's mother, Margot, he marvels at this new lease on life, telling his son that the "surprises just keep on coming." The interplay between the generations is key to this story, and Calisher skilfully interweaves their lives, although they live on opposite coasts - the older couple in California. It is only after his father's death that David begins to see how closely they have been, and still are, all connected.

"He saw. If one could imagine a loom, or looms innumerable, warp-and-woof radiating everywhere, perhaps not even from a center. The texture was so tight that one could never see, even over as much as four years of it, where any one part had begun."

This book was first published in 1963 and has been long out of print but it has a kind of timeless widsom and beauty that makes it classic. I'm glad I finally found it and read it.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
TimBazzett | 1 andere bespreking | Sep 28, 2009 |

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Statistieken

Werken
32
Ook door
27
Leden
607
Populariteit
#41,417
Waardering
½ 3.7
Besprekingen
7
ISBNs
72
Favoriet
2

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