White Heat: The Friendship of Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson

Awards:   Short-listed for National Book Critics Circle Awards 2008 Winner of Boston Authors Club Book Award 2009 Winner of Marfield Prize.
Author:   Brenda Wineapple
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
ISBN:  

9780307456304


Pages:   432
Publication Date:   01 December 2009
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

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White Heat: The Friendship of Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson


Awards

  • Short-listed for National Book Critics Circle Awards 2008
  • Winner of Boston Authors Club Book Award 2009
  • Winner of Marfield Prize.

Overview

White Heat is the first book to portray the remarkable relationship between America's most beloved poet and the fiery abolitionist who first brought her work to the public.  As the Civil War raged, an unlikely friendship was born between the reclusive poet Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson, a literary figure who ran guns to Kansas and commanded the first Union regiment of black soldiers. When Dickinson sent Higginson four of her poems he realized he had encountered a wholly original genius; their intense correspondence continued for the next quarter century. In White Heat Brenda Wineapple tells an extraordinary story about poetry, politics, and love, one that sheds new light on her subjects and on the roiling America they shared.    

Full Product Details

Author:   Brenda Wineapple
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
Imprint:   Random House Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 13.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.264kg
ISBN:  

9780307456304


ISBN 10:   0307456307
Pages:   432
Publication Date:   01 December 2009
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Inactive
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

Table of Contents

Reviews

National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist <p>A New York Times Notable Book of the Year <br> <br>A Best Book of the Year in The Washington Post, The Economist, The Christian Science Monitor, The Providence Journal, and The Kansas City Star <br>Winner of the Arts Club of Washington National Award for Arts Writing <br> <br> A tour de force that should delight specialists and casual readers alike. . . . Fascinating. --Washington Post <br> <br> Written with a dry heat that does justice to its impassioned protagonists. . . . Wineapple [has] a feisty prose style and a relish for unsettling received ideas. --The New Yorker <br> <br> Wineapple achieves what the best literary biography should: a portrait which provides close-up moments of tangible intimacy while allowing the subject to remain ultimately mysterious. --The Economist <br> <br> One of the most astonishing books about poetry I have ever read. It causes us to see


Brenda Wineapple provides a nuanced and quite moving account of the improbable relationship between an 'activist' and a 'recluse.' <br>- New York Sun <br> [Wineapple] brings a scholar's diligence and a novelist's imagination to her account of Dickinson and Higginson's relationship, crafting a tour de force that should delight specialists and casual readers alike. The book's individual strands of inquiry-Higginson's life, Dickinson's poems, the letters that passed between them, and the historical, political and artistic contexts of the age-are interesting in and of themselves, but when intertwined so as to inform and strengthen each other, they're fascinating....Wineapple is a tremendously versatile and sensitive writer, and she elucidates her subjects' subtleties with authority and grace. She conjures up vivid scenes but never oversteps the historian's duty to fact, dispenses an enormous amount of documentary information without ever overburdening her narrative, and interprets Dickinson's often challenging poems with eloquence and lucidity. Not a biography, history or literary analysis, yet something of each, White Heat amply demonstrates that indirect illumination sometimes casts the brightest light. <br>-Joel Brouwer, The Washington Post <br> <br> Much more than a biography-rather, a sweeping cultural and political history of the lead-up to the American civil war and its aftermath...[Wineapple] has too much intellectual integrity to pretend to pin the poet down. Instead she achieves what the best literary biography should: a portrait which provides close-up moments of tangible intimacy while allowing the subject to remain ultimately mysterious. <br>- The Economist<br> Brenda Wineapple's White Heat is one of the most astonishing books about poetry I have ever read. It causes us to see Emily Dickinson, perhaps for the first time, as an actual human being of a particular time and place, rather than as a timeless, ghostly and ethereal instrument of first-rank poetic genius-and she had red hair! Wineapple clarifies our past misconceptions about Higginson, and captures how he wisely and cunningly sought to protect a sensitive and eccentric poet from the vicious idiocies of the literary world. Beautifully written, illuminated by Wineapple's grasp of nineteenth-century American history, with its astonishing cast of literary, philosophical and military personalities, the book is irresistibly entertaining. <br>-Franz Wright <br> Wineapple is an astute literary biographer with a feisty prose style and a relish for unsettling received ideas. Social history-the taproot of character-is her forte... White Heat is written with a dry heat that does justice to its impassioned protagonists. <br>-Judith Thurman, The New Yorker <br> <br> White Heat succeeds magnificently in shining a light into the work of two unlikely friends...a powerful insight into two extraordinary figures who where there, in a rather unusual way, for each other. <br> -Bookpage <br> <br> A nuanced and insightful study. <br> -Booklist, starred <br> (A) brilliant study...she elegantly delves into a life and offers rich insights into a little-known relationship between two of the late-19th century's most intriguing writers. <br> -Publishers Weekly, starred <p> A moving portrait of two unalike but kindred spirits who did indeed Dare [to] see a Soul at the 'White Heat.' <br>-Kirkus Reviews, starred <br> White Heat is the story of a famous friendship in American Literature, but it is much more than that. Wineapple's decision to let Higginson's life carry the narrative, with Dickinson's work providing the light from within-the epiphanies-is a stroke of structural genius worthy of Dickinson herself. This brilliant and moving sortie is without question the best account of Emily Dickinson ever written. It is a great story, greatly told. <br>-Robert D. Richardson, author of Henry Thoreau: A Life of the Mind and Emerson: The Mind on Fire<br> <br> Brenda Wineapple, a superb literary critic, has a historian's soul. In White Heat, she beautifully describes the quiet drama and elusive tempos of one of the most improbable and fateful authorial friendships in all of American writing. Few contemporary interpreters, if any, could have understood the story in all its richness as Wineapple has-and then related it with such grace as well as authority. <br>-Sean Wilentz, author of The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln <br> Sensitive and haunting evocation of an epistolary love affair between a famously reclusive poet and a handsome activist minister, told with all the power and passion of Emily Dickinson's art. <br>-Meryle Secrest <br> For those of us who have all but memorized Dickinson's poems and for anyone who has yet to discover this irresistible American original, Brenda Wineapple's gorgeously composed portrait of an extraordinary friendship will be a revelation. Her research is impeccable, partly because she is wise about the nuances of love, and partly, and this is no small matter for a literary historian, because she writes like aneloquent angel. Always a brilliant story teller, she has somehow managed, this time, to outdo even her own previous outdoing. <br>-Joel Conarroe <br> White Heat is biography at its very best. It brings these two to life more exactly, more sympathetically, more vividly than ever before. A triumph! <br>-J.D. McClatchy, poet, editor of Yale Review <br> Brenda Wineapple brilliantly excavates and tracks the surprising relationship between Emily Dickinson, the reclusive genius of American literature, and Wentworth Higginson, her unlikely Preceptor. The book tells an unknown story. It also further establishes Wineapple as one of our finest literary biographers. <br>- Edward Hirsch <br> White Heat captures the most elusive of elective affinities in American letters. With matchless authority and knowledge, Wineapple restores, for the first time, the friendship between the reclusive genius and the bustling public man. <br>-Benita Eisler <br> Toeing the circumferences of biography and literary criticism, Brenda Wineapple has done an admirable and eloquent job of unraveling this intriguing chapter in the Emily Dickinson story, but always with respect for the mystery of compatibility at its core. No book I know brings us deeper into the inner chambers of this poet's private life. <br>-Billy Collins, former poet laureate <br>


National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist A New York Times Notable Book of the Year A Best Book of the Year in The Washington Post, The Economist, The Christian Science Monitor, The Providence Journal, and The Kansas City Star Winner of the Arts Club of Washington National Award for Arts Writing A tour de force that should delight specialists and casual readers alike. . . . Fascinating. --Washington Post Written with a dry heat that does justice to its impassioned protagonists. . . . Wineapple [has] a feisty prose style and a relish for unsettling received ideas. --The New Yorker Wineapple achieves what the best literary biography should: a portrait which provides close-up moments of tangible intimacy while allowing the subject to remain ultimately mysterious. --The Economist One of the most astonishing books about poetry I have ever read. It causes us to see Emily Dickinson, perhaps for the first time, as an actual human being of a particular time and place, rather than as a timeless, ghostly, and ethereal instrument of first-rank poetic genius. . . . Irresistibly entertaining. --Franz Wright A wonderfully evocative double portrait. --Joyce Carol Oates, New York Review of Books One of the best books of 2008. . . . Wineapple's superb biography of the friendship between Emily Dickinson and her editor, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, complicates our understanding of the Belle of Amherst. --Maureen Corrigan, NPR A dual biography of astonishing depth and grace. --The Boston Globe A brilliant account of one of the oddest literary friendships in American history. --Foreign Affairs A prismatic double portrait. Ms. Wineapple specializes in imparting flesh-and-blood substance and narrative thrust to literary biographies. --The Wall Street Journal Intelligent, delightful. . . . A rich and satisfying journey. --Christian Science Monitor A model biography cum literary study set against an inexhaustibly interesting historical backdrop. --Miami Herald Careful research and a lively prose style. . . . A double delight. --St. Louis Post-Dispatch In her trenchant, memorable narrative of Dickinson's quarter-century entanglement with Higginson, Wineapple takes us into the white heat they generated together, a synergy that made their cold New England souls immeasurably warmer. --Times Literary Supplement (London) This double biography reveals a captivating Dickinson. --Time Brenda Wineapple, a superb literary critic, has a historian's soul. In White Heat, she beautifully describes the quiet drama and elusive tempos of one of the most improbable and fateful authorial friendships in all of American writing. Few contemporary interpreters, if any, could have understood the story in all its richness as Wineapple has--and then related it with such grace as well as authority. --Sean Wilentz Wineapple has done an admirable and eloquent job of unraveling this intriguing chapter in Emily Dickinson's story, but always with respect for the mystery of compatibility at its core. No book I know brings us deeper into the inner chambers of this poet's private life. --Billy Collins [This] is one of the strangest stories in American literary history--poignant, exasperating, moving--and Wineapple tells it with a rare brio and authority. White Heat is biography at its very best. It brings these two to life more exactly, more sympathetically, more vividly than ever before. A triumph! --J. D. McClatchy


Author Information

Brenda Wineapple is the author of Genet: A Biography of Janet Flanner; Sister Brother: Gertrude and Leo Stein; and Hawthorne: A Life, winner of the Ambassador Award of the English-Speaking Union for Best Biography of 2003. Her essays and reviews appear in many publications, among them The New York Times Book Review and The Nation. She has been the recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation. She lives in New York City and teaches creative writing at Columbia University and The New School.

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