Dauntingesque Alighierical; or A Portrait is Worth About 400 Pages of Letters: New Titles in Graduate Services for September

Supposedly, Pablo Picasso made Gertrude Stein sit more than eighty times for her portrait. And then painted out the head and redid it three months later without having seen her again. When told Stein did not look like her portrait, Picasso replied, she will. Ever wonder what the two of them were talking about when Stein wasn’t spending her days sitting for Picasso? Well, Correspondence: Gertrude Stein and Pablo Picasso edited by Laurence Madeline is now a part of the Graduate Services Collection and it might answer this question. Along with the letters between these two titians of Modernism, the corresponce between George Bernard Shaw and his publishers and the letters between Theodore Dreiser and his women (the ones he fancied anyway) are now in Graduate Services; both should make for some interesting reading to say the least. There is also a book of George Orwell’s thoughts on art in general and a book length conversation with Seamus Heaney on his art in particular. Want more? How about Burroughs and Kerouac sparring with art (and authorial ideology) as well as each other while finding their voices through collaboration in the long lost manuscipt now not so lost, And the Hippos were Boiled in their Tanks. Trying to get a word in edgewise are some works by Bowen, Atwood, Badiou (twice again), Cheever, Merwin, Oates, Zizek, and, always a part of the conversation 700 years and counting, Dante. From old favorites getting new looks to a few new books from old favorites talking about their books. Literature, letters, and good conversation seemed to sum up September. Enjoy.

 

 

Inferno by Dante Alighieri translated by Robert M. Durling 

 

 

 Purgatorio by Dante Alighieri translated by Robert M. Durling

 

 

A Quiet Game and Other Early Works by Margaret Atwood

 

 

The Century by Alain Badiou 

 

 

 Conditions by Alain Badiou 

 

People, places, things 

 People, Places, Things by Elizabeth Bowen

 

National Melancholy: Mourning and Opportunity in Classic American Literature by Mitchell Breitwieser

 

 

And the Hippos were Boiled in their Tanks by William S. Burroughs and Jack Kerouac

 

 

 Complete Novels of John Cheever

 

 

Collected Stories and Other Writings of John Cheever

 

 

 Letters to Women: New Letters Volume II by Theodore Dreiser

 

 

The Dream We Carry by Olav H. Hauge translated by Robert Bly and Robert Hedin

 

 

Stepping Stones: Interviews with Seamus Heaney by Dennis O’Driscoll

 

 

The Shadow of Sirius by W.S. Merwin

 

 

 Laboring Women: Reproduction and Gender in New World Slavery by Jennifer L. Morgan

 

 

Dear Husband by Joyce Carol Oates

 

 

 All Art is Propaganda by George Orwell

 

 

 Selected Correspondence of Bernard Shaw: Bernard Shaw and his Publishers edited by Michel W. Pharand

 

 

Correspondence: Gertrude Stein and Pablo Picasso edited by Laurence Madeline

 

 

Violence: Six Sideways Reflections by Slavoj Zizek

 

 


Dauntingesque Alighierical; or A Portrait is Worth About 400 Pages of Letters: New Titles in Graduate Services for September

Supposedly, Pablo Picasso made Gertrude Stein sit more than eighty times for her portrait. And then painted out the head and redid it three months later without having seen her again. When told Stein did not look like her portrait, Picasso replied, she will. Ever wonder what the two of them were talking about when Stein wasn’t spending her days sitting for Picasso? Well, Correspondence: Gertrude Stein and Pablo Picasso edited by Laurence Madeline is now a part of the Graduate Services Collection and it might answer this question. Along with the letters between these two titians of Modernism, the corresponce between George Bernard Shaw and his publishers and the letters between Theodore Dreiser and his women (the ones he fancied anyway) are now in Graduate Services; both should make for some interesting reading to say the least. There is also a book of George Orwell’s thoughts on art in general and a book length conversation with Seamus Heaney on his art in particular. Want more? How about Burroughs and Kerouac sparring with art (and authorial ideology) as well as each other while finding their voices through collaboration in the long lost manuscipt now not so lost, And the Hippos were Boiled in their Tanks. Trying to get a word in edgewise are some works by Bowen, Atwood, Badiou (twice again), Cheever, Merwin, Oates, Zizek, and, always a part of the conversation 700 years and counting, Dante. From old favorites getting new looks to a few new books from old favorites talking about their books. Literature, letters, and good conversation seemed to sum up September. Enjoy.

 

 

Inferno by Dante Alighieri translated by Robert M. Durling 

 

 

 Purgatorio by Dante Alighieri translated by Robert M. Durling

 

 

A Quiet Game and Other Early Works by Margaret Atwood

 

 

The Century by Alain Badiou 

 

 

 Conditions by Alain Badiou 

 

People, places, things 

 People, Places, Things by Elizabeth Bowen

 

National Melancholy: Mourning and Opportunity in Classic American Literature by Mitchell Breitwieser

 

 

And the Hippos were Boiled in their Tanks by William S. Burroughs and Jack Kerouac

 

 

 Complete Novels of John Cheever

 

 

Collected Stories and Other Writings of John Cheever

 

 

 Letters to Women: New Letters Volume II by Theodore Dreiser

 

 

The Dream We Carry by Olav H. Hauge translated by Robert Bly and Robert Hedin

 

 

Stepping Stones: Interviews with Seamus Heaney by Dennis O’Driscoll

 

 

The Shadow of Sirius by W.S. Merwin

 

 

 Laboring Women: Reproduction and Gender in New World Slavery by Jennifer L. Morgan

 

 

Dear Husband by Joyce Carol Oates

 

 

 All Art is Propaganda by George Orwell

 

 

 Selected Correspondence of Bernard Shaw: Bernard Shaw and his Publishers edited by Michel W. Pharand

 

 

Correspondence: Gertrude Stein and Pablo Picasso edited by Laurence Madeline

 

 

Violence: Six Sideways Reflections by Slavoj Zizek