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Joyce Carol Oates: Letters To A Biographer,Used
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This rich compilation of Joyce Carol Oates's letters across four decades displays her warmth and generosity, her droll and sometimes wicked sense of humor, her phenomenal energy, and most of all, her mastery of the lost art of letter writing.'It's hard to think of another writer with as fecund and protean an imagination as the eightyfiveyearold Joyce Carol Oates, who is surely on any short list of America's greatest living writers.' New York Times MagazineIn this generous selection of Joyce Carol Oates's letters to her biographer and friend Greg Johnson, readers will discover a neverbeforeseen dimension of her phenomenal talent.In 1975, when Johnson was a graduate student, he first wrote to Oates, already a worldfamous author, and drew an appreciative, empathetic response. Soon the two began a fairly intense, largely epistolary friendship that would last until the present day. As time passed, letters became faxes, and faxes became emails, but the energy and vividness of Oates's writing never abated. Her letters are often sprinkled with the names of famous people, from John Updike and Toni Morrison to Steve Martin and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. There are also descriptions of farflung travels she undertook with her first husband, the scholar and editor Raymond Smith, and with her second, the distinguished Princeton neuroscientist Charlie Gross. But much of Oates's prose centered on the pleasures of her home life, including her pet cats and the wildlife outside her study window.Whereas her academic essays and book reviews are eloquent in a formal way, in these letters she is wholly relaxed, even when she is serious in her concerns. Like Johnson, she was always engaged in work, whether a long novel or a brief essay, and the letters give a fascinating glimpse into Oates's writing practice.
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