Gass, William H., 1924-2017
Person
Found in 2 Collections and/or Records:
A Temple of Texts, 2006
Item
Identifier: CC-60651-10003522
Scope and Contents
From Publishers Weekly: Gass loves words. His prose is extravagant, lush, sometimes overly florid (as when he talks of Flann O'Brien's death on "the first Fools' Day of April, 1966"), and in this new collection, his words have a tendency to get in the way of his subject matter. Which is a shame, because Gass, a novelist and award-winning critic, writes about books and authors often ignored by mainstream readers: Rabelais, Robert Burton, Elias Canetti. Then again, Gass doesn't write for the mainstream. He is the strangest of academic amalgams: a self-professed lover of the avant-garde as represented by Gertrude Stein, Flann O'Brien and Robert Coover, while at the same time he extols the virtues of what he calls "the classics." His definition of classic is, to be sure, expansive, but he applies an old-fashioned standard to all literature, declaring the need for those classics as the basis for a varied literary diet. Despite the occasional gem, such as a touching, if rambling, tribute...
Dates:
2006
Finding a Form: Essays, 1996
Item
Identifier: CC-27707-28799
Scope and Contents
Includes "The Book as Container of Consciousness" which was given as an address at a conference on the book sponsored by the J. Paul Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities. The Sackners were invited to participate in this conference and heard William Gass deliver this poetic essay at the final forum. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Dates:
1996
