The Shadow in the Garden: A Biographer's Tale

Author:   James Atlas
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
ISBN:  

9780525431824


Pages:   400
Publication Date:   06 November 2018
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Shadow in the Garden: A Biographer's Tale


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Author:   James Atlas
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
Imprint:   Vintage Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.70cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 23.60cm
Weight:   0.449kg
ISBN:  

9780525431824


ISBN 10:   0525431829
Pages:   400
Publication Date:   06 November 2018
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

There are times when you like a book so much that you want to call up the author. For me, this is one of those rare times. --John Tytell, Los Angeles Review of Books Entertaining . . . A goody bag of quotable incidents and a useful guide to the biographer's tradecraft. --James Wolcott, The London Review of Books Absorbing . . . The Shadow in The Garden will, I predict, have a long life precisely because its author, a man for whom biography-writing proved a release into literary expressiveness, has endowed it with so much genuine thought and feeling. --Vivian Gornick, Boston Review A work of both depth and radiance . . . Expert, provocative, and enlightening . . . Atlas relays all with wry hilarity, bighearted candor, and effervescent passion for the art of literary biography. --Donna Seaman, Booklist (starred review) In recounting a life largely subsumed by the lives of others, James Atlas reveals, with sincerity, humor, and incisiveness, the value and the difficulty of looking outside oneself for meaning. The Shadow in the Garden is a brutally honest look at the ways in which our lives are shaped--both with and without our knowledge--by the lives of others. --Amanda Foreman, author of Georgiana: Duchess of Devonshire [Praise for the audiobook edition] A listener's treat . . . Expertly read by George Newbern . . . One of those rare literary gems that exceed their dimensions. --David A. Walton, Audiofile Illuminating . . . A brutally honest examination of the biographical craft and a good companion piece to Richard Holmes's This Long Pursuit. --Kirkus Reviews A unique, behind-the-scenes look . . . Readers of literary biographies (or any type of biography) rarely get such an insight into the process itself. --Lee Polevoi, Highbrow Magazine Witty, conscientious, and perceptive . . . Part literary history and part memoir, this is a lively and elegant biography of biography itself. --Publishers Weekly An arresting book, at once personal and broad in its purview. --Robert Weibezahl, BookPage The dishiest book ever written about serious literature . . . A master class in empathy: stumbling on it, learning to use it, applying it to your own life. --Jesse Kornbluth, Head Butler Atlas, with incredible knowledge of all things literary, and with self-deprecating (almost self-lacerating at times) wit and wisdom, gives us the history of the biography form itself. --Michelle Willens, The Huffington Post The Shadow in the Garden is written on behalf of all the biographers whose honesty about their subjects was interpreted as gossip, or whose readability was maligned as salaciousness. Such are the pitfalls of the genre. But is biography writing worth it? Atlas thinks it is. --Robert Minto, The New Republic Biographers and their subjects engage in a prolonged dance of mutual seduction and betrayal and nobody elucidates this maddening psychodrama better than James Atlas. With candor, subtle insight, and almost heartbreaking humility, he narrates his pursuit of the deceased Delmore Schwartz and the often forbiddingly alive Saul Bellow, laying bare both the pitfalls and rewards of biography. Best of all his memoir is enriched by an encyclopedic knowledge of literary biography that enables the reader to measure his unending quest against the high standard set by James Boswell and Samuel Johnson and many other illustrious predecessors. Anyone even remotely interested in the art of biography will be captivated. --Ron Chernow, author of Alexander Hamilton I loved this book and was sorry to see it end--not simply because I happen to be one of the 'obsessive diggers drawn to this odd profession, ' as Atlas puts it, but because it's a funny, amazingly candid, beautifully written, and, yes, profound meditation on the maddening (and ultimately impossible) business of understanding another human being. --Blake Bailey, author of Cheever: A Life How can a book be both modest and magisterial? James Atlas, in his confidences about his own methods as a biographer and in his thrilling presentation of the great biographers of the past (from Plutarch to Leon Edel), tells us everything we need to know, but lightly, sincerely--and definitively. --Edmund White, author of Rimbaud: The Double-Life of a Rebel The biographer slips into another's skin; he is meant to assume someone else's unconscious. By definition, he erases himself in the process. Writing of and around his books, Atlas triumphantly returns that fugitive figure--part sleuth, part scholar, part analyst, part medium, an emissary between worlds--to the page. The result is a lyrical, tender, and unexpectedly suspenseful take on a life in literature. 'There is no such thing as Biography School, ' Atlas laments at one juncture. There is now. --Stacy Schiff, author of Cleopatra: A Life Oh God, Atlas has given it all away: all the trade secrets, anxieties, ploys, scruples, and obsessions of the literary biographer, the noble and ignoble inner workings of the craft, along with an enthralling history of it, and of its greatest practitioners. This excellent memoir may make you think twice about writing a life--i.e., subsuming your own to it--but it will inspire you to rush out to read one. --Judith Thurman, author of Isak Dinesen: The Life of a Storyteller


There are times when you like a book so much that you want to call up the author. For me, this is one of those rare times. -John Tytell, Los Angeles Review of Books Entertaining . . . A goody bag of quotable incidents and a useful guide to the biographer's tradecraft. -James Wolcott, The London Review of Books Absorbing . . . The Shadow in The Garden will, I predict, have a long life precisely because its author, a man for whom biography-writing proved a release into literary expressiveness, has endowed it with so much genuine thought and feeling. -Vivian Gornick, Boston Review A work of both depth and radiance . . . Expert, provocative, and enlightening . . . Atlas relays all with wry hilarity, bighearted candor, and effervescent passion for the art of literary biography. -Donna Seaman, Booklist (starred review) In recounting a life largely subsumed by the lives of others, James Atlas reveals, with sincerity, humor, and incisiveness, the value and the difficulty of looking outside oneself for meaning. The Shadow in the Garden is a brutally honest look at the ways in which our lives are shaped-both with and without our knowledge-by the lives of others. -Amanda Foreman, author of Georgiana: Duchess of Devonshire [Praise for the audiobook edition] A listener's treat . . . Expertly read by George Newbern . . . One of those rare literary gems that exceed their dimensions. -David A. Walton, Audiofile Illuminating . . . A brutally honest examination of the biographical craft and a good companion piece to Richard Holmes's This Long Pursuit. -Kirkus Reviews A unique, behind-the-scenes look . . . Readers of literary biographies (or any type of biography) rarely get such an insight into the process itself. -Lee Polevoi, Highbrow Magazine Witty, conscientious, and perceptive . . . Part literary history and part memoir, this is a lively and elegant biography of biography itself. -Publishers Weekly An arresting book, at once personal and broad in its purview. -Robert Weibezahl, BookPage The dishiest book ever written about serious literature . . . A master class in empathy: stumbling on it, learning to use it, applying it to your own life. -Jesse Kornbluth, Head Butler Atlas, with incredible knowledge of all things literary, and with self-deprecating (almost self-lacerating at times) wit and wisdom, gives us the history of the biography form itself. -Michelle Willens, The Huffington Post The Shadow in the Garden is written on behalf of all the biographers whose honesty about their subjects was interpreted as gossip, or whose readability was maligned as salaciousness. Such are the pitfalls of the genre. But is biography writing worth it? Atlas thinks it is. -Robert Minto, The New Republic Biographers and their subjects engage in a prolonged dance of mutual seduction and betrayal and nobody elucidates this maddening psychodrama better than James Atlas. With candor, subtle insight, and almost heartbreaking humility, he narrates his pursuit of the deceased Delmore Schwartz and the often forbiddingly alive Saul Bellow, laying bare both the pitfalls and rewards of biography. Best of all his memoir is enriched by an encyclopedic knowledge of literary biography that enables the reader to measure his unending quest against the high standard set by James Boswell and Samuel Johnson and many other illustrious predecessors. Anyone even remotely interested in the art of biography will be captivated. -Ron Chernow, author of Alexander Hamilton I loved this book and was sorry to see it end-not simply because I happen to be one of the 'obsessive diggers drawn to this odd profession,' as Atlas puts it, but because it's a funny, amazingly candid, beautifully written, and, yes, profound meditation on the maddening (and ultimately impossible) business of understanding another human being. -Blake Bailey, author of Cheever: A Life How can a book be both modest and magisterial? James Atlas, in his confidences about his own methods as a biographer and in his thrilling presentation of the great biographers of the past (from Plutarch to Leon Edel), tells us everything we need to know, but lightly, sincerely-and definitively. -Edmund White, author of Rimbaud: The Double-Life of a Rebel The biographer slips into another's skin; he is meant to assume someone else's unconscious. By definition, he erases himself in the process. Writing of and around his books, Atlas triumphantly returns that fugitive figure-part sleuth, part scholar, part analyst, part medium, an emissary between worlds-to the page. The result is a lyrical, tender, and unexpectedly suspenseful take on a life in literature. 'There is no such thing as Biography School,' Atlas laments at one juncture. There is now. -Stacy Schiff, author of Cleopatra: A Life Oh God, Atlas has given it all away: all the trade secrets, anxieties, ploys, scruples, and obsessions of the literary biographer, the noble and ignoble inner workings of the craft, along with an enthralling history of it, and of its greatest practitioners. This excellent memoir may make you think twice about writing a life-i.e., subsuming your own to it-but it will inspire you to rush out to read one. -Judith Thurman, author of Isak Dinesen: The Life of a Storyteller


There are times when you like a book so much that you want to call up the author. For me, this is one of those rare times. --John Tytell, Los Angeles Review of Books Absorbing . . . The Shadow in The Garden will, I predict, have a long life precisely because its author, a man for whom biography-writing proved a release into literary expressiveness, has endowed it with so much genuine thought and feeling. --Vivian Gornick, Boston Review A work of both depth and radiance . . . Expert, provocative, and enlightening . . . Atlas relays all with wry hilarity, bighearted candor, and effervescent passion for the art of literary biography. --Donna Seaman, Booklist (starred review) In recounting a life largely subsumed by the lives of others, James Atlas reveals, with sincerity, humor, and incisiveness, the value and the difficulty of looking outside oneself for meaning. The Shadow in the Garden is a brutally honest look at the ways in which our lives are shaped--both with and without our knowledge--by the lives of others. --Amanda Foreman, author of Georgiana: Duchess of Devonshire [Praise for the audiobook edition] A listener's treat . . . Expertly read by George Newbern . . . One of those rare literary gems that exceed their dimensions. --David A. Walton, Audiofile Illuminating . . . A brutally honest examination of the biographical craft and a good companion piece to Richard Holmes's This Long Pursuit. --Kirkus Reviews A unique, behind-the-scenes look . . . Readers of literary biographies (or any type of biography) rarely get such an insight into the process itself. --Lee Polevoi, Highbrow Magazine Witty, conscientious, and perceptive . . . Part literary history and part memoir, this is a lively and elegant biography of biography itself. --Publishers Weekly An arresting book, at once personal and broad in its purview. --Robert Weibezahl, BookPage The dishiest book ever written about serious literature . . . A master class in empathy: stumbling on it, learning to use it, applying it to your own life. --Jesse Kornbluth, Head Butler Atlas, with incredible knowledge of all things literary, and with self-deprecating (almost self-lacerating at times) wit and wisdom, gives us the history of the biography form itself. --Michelle Willens, The Huffington Post The Shadow in the Garden is written on behalf of all the biographers whose honesty about their subjects was interpreted as gossip, or whose readability was maligned as salaciousness. Such are the pitfalls of the genre. But is biography writing worth it? Atlas thinks it is. --Robert Minto, The New Republic Biographers and their subjects engage in a prolonged dance of mutual seduction and betrayal and nobody elucidates this maddening psychodrama better than James Atlas. With candor, subtle insight, and almost heartbreaking humility, he narrates his pursuit of the deceased Delmore Schwartz and the often forbiddingly alive Saul Bellow, laying bare both the pitfalls and rewards of biography. Best of all his memoir is enriched by an encyclopedic knowledge of literary biography that enables the reader to measure his unending quest against the high standard set by James Boswell and Samuel Johnson and many other illustrious predecessors. Anyone even remotely interested in the art of biography will be captivated. --Ron Chernow, author of Alexander Hamilton I loved this book and was sorry to see it end--not simply because I happen to be one of the 'obsessive diggers drawn to this odd profession, ' as Atlas puts it, but because it's a funny, amazingly candid, beautifully written, and, yes, profound meditation on the maddening (and ultimately impossible) business of understanding another human being. --Blake Bailey, author of Cheever: A Life How can a book be both modest and magisterial? James Atlas, in his confidences about his own methods as a biographer and in his thrilling presentation of the great biographers of the past (from Plutarch to Leon Edel), tells us everything we need to know, but lightly, sincerely--and definitively. --Edmund White, author of Rimbaud: The Double-Life of a Rebel The biographer slips into another's skin; he is meant to assume someone else's unconscious. By definition, he erases himself in the process. Writing of and around his books, Atlas triumphantly returns that fugitive figure--part sleuth, part scholar, part analyst, part medium, an emissary between worlds--to the page. The result is a lyrical, tender, and unexpectedly suspenseful take on a life in literature. 'There is no such thing as Biography School, ' Atlas laments at one juncture. There is now. --Stacy Schiff, author of Cleopatra: A Life Oh God, Atlas has given it all away: all the trade secrets, anxieties, ploys, scruples, and obsessions of the literary biographer, the noble and ignoble inner workings of the craft, along with an enthralling history of it, and of its greatest practitioners. This excellent memoir may make you think twice about writing a life--i.e., subsuming your own to it--but it will inspire you to rush out to read one. --Judith Thurman, author of Isak Dinesen: The Life of a Storyteller


Author Information

JAMES ATLAS is the author of Bellow: A Biography; Delmore Schwartz: The Life of an American Poet (nominated for the National Book Award); and the memoir My Life in the Middle Ages: A Survivor’s Tale. The founder of the Lipper/Viking Penguin Lives series, Atlas was for many years an editor at The New York Times, first at the book review and later at the magazine. His work has appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The New York Review of Books, Vanity Fair, and other journals. He lives in New York City.

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