Afbeelding auteur

Lilian Pizzichini

Auteur van The Blue Hour: a life of Jean Rhys

7 Werken 131 Leden 2 Besprekingen

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Werken van Lilian Pizzichini

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Gangbare naam
Pizzichini, Lilian
Geboortedatum
1965
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
UK
Geboorteplaats
London, England, UK

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Besprekingen

I read this biography in conjunction with a reread of Wide Sargasso Sea and a complete reading of Rhys's other four novellas and her short stories. As such, it was a useful biography to put the works into the context of Rhys's life, but it was also frustrating due to its lack of footnoting, which makes it difficult at times to distinguish between Rhys's largely autobiographical fiction and the actual facts of Rhys's own life. This lack of footnoting gives this biography a feeling of "popular" biography, and I'm not sure Rhys is of sufficient interest to draw a large "popular" readership to her life — but, in contrast, I think academic readers are going to find the lack of footnoting disconcerting.

Useful, but Lilian Pizzichini is, shall we say, no Juliet Barker, Jenny Uglow, or Hermione Lee.

And now, having finished Rhys's own Smile Please: An Unfinished Autobiography, I'll add that Pizzichini is too reliant on Rhys's own published writings in Pizzichini's own authorship of this biography.
… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
CurrerBell | 1 andere bespreking | Feb 19, 2016 |
Jean Rhys, alchemist and alcoholic, lived a long and angry life. In her writing, she found sanctuary, and maybe redemption, by transmuting the lead and arsenic of her daily relations into literary gold. Lilian Pizzichini's The Blue Hour is a dispassionate look at the career and careening of a woman of whom it must have been difficult to be an indifferent acquaintance. A few, always, felt a need to hold her hand, and kept her afloat; most people, I think, would have preferred to slap her. If you've read Rhys novels, you will recognize much of the biographical material in The Blue Hour. Pizzichini covers Rhys's childhood in the Caribbean, her teen years in London, her life as a showgirl, as a gamine in Paris, and as a wife in Vienna. Rhys unabashedly cannibalized her life for her art. Her writing is spare, precise, and cuts like a knife. And so, by reflection, The Blue Hour slashes, involuntarily, at its own portrait of Rhys. An alcoholic heroine is, ultimately, a contradiction in terms, and judging Rhys is a close call. Did she cleverly harvest the fruits of her alcoholism to enable her embittered isolation, or did she heroically transcend her isolation in writing about it? Jean Rhys - whether lady, tiger, or feral kitten - kneaded people with very sharp claws.… (meer)
4 stem
Gemarkeerd
Ganeshaka | 1 andere bespreking | Aug 31, 2009 |

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Statistieken

Werken
7
Leden
131
Populariteit
#154,467
Waardering
½ 3.4
Besprekingen
2
ISBNs
18

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