: Fleur Jaeggy
: These Possible Lives
: New Directions
: 9780811226882
: 1
: CHF 22.50
:
: Biographien, Autobiographien
: English
: 64
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
New Directions is proud to present Fleur Jaeggy's strange and mesmerizing essays about the writers Thomas De Quincey, John Keats, and Marcel Schwob. A renowned stylist ofhyper-brevity in fiction, Fleur Jaeggy proves herself an even more concise master of the essay form, albeit in a most peculiar and lapidary poetic vein. Of De Quincey s early nineteenth-century world we hear of the habits of writers: Charles Lamb spoke of Lilliputian rabbits when eating frog fricassse , Henry Fuseli ate a diet of raw meat in order to obtain splendid dreams , Hazlitt was perceptive about musculature and boxers , and Wordsworth used a buttery knife to cut the pages of a first-edition Burke. In a book of blue devils and night visions, the Keats essay opens: In 1803, the guillotine was a common child s toy. And poor Schwob s end comes as he feels like a dog cut open alive : His face colored slightly, turning into a mask of gold. His eyes stayed open imperiously. No one could shut his eyelids. The room smoked of grief. Fleur Jaeggy s essays or are they prose poems? smoke of necessity: the pages are on fire.