Writer’s Wednesday: Pablo Neruda

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Click Here to Read: Pablo Neruda on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Pablo Neruda on the Poetry Foundation Website.

Click Here to Read: Pablo Neruda, The Art of Poetry No. 14 Interviewed by Rita Guibert in the Paris Review Spring 1971, No. 51.

Click Here to Read: The Ecstatsist: Pablo Neruda and his passions By Mark Strand In The New Yorker in the September 8, 2003 Issue.

Pablo Neruda in 1963: photo from Wikipedia.

Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Pablo Neruda

Writer’s Wednesday: Lincoln Steffens

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Click Here to Read: Lincoln Steffens on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Lincoln Steffens: Muckraker’s Progress By Kevin Baker in The New York Times on May 13, 2011.

Click Here to Read: Lincoln Steffens on the American National Biography website.

Click Here to Read: Editorial Observer; ‘The Shame’ That Lincoln Steffens Found Has Not Left Our Country By Adam Cohen in The New York Times on April 11, 2004. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Lincoln Steffens

Writer’s Wednesday: John Dos Passos

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Click Here to Read: John Dos Passos on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: John Dos Passos, The Art of Fiction No. 44 Interviewed by David Sanders in the Paris Review in the Spring 1969 No. 46 Issue.

Click Here to Read: Dos Passos and the Many Lives of ‘U.S.A.’ by Richard Gilman in The New York Times on March 16, 1997.

Click Here to Read: The U.S.A. Trilogy by John Dos Passos, Reviewed By Will Aaugerot the Rumpus website on December 26th, 2013. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: John Dos Passos

Writer’s Wednesday: Lionel Trilling

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Click Here to Read: Lionel Trilling on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: The Last Great Critic: Lionel Trilling believed that politics needed the imaginative qualities of literature and that liberalism needed literature’s sense of “variousness, possibility, complexity, and difficulty” by Nathan Glick in the Atlantic Monthly in the July 2000 Issue.

Click Here to Read:  Regrets Only: Lionel Trilling and his discontents By Louis Menand in the New Yorker on September 29, 2008. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Lionel Trilling

Writer’s Wednesday: Erich Maria Remarque

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Click Here to Read: Erich Maria Remarque on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read:   All Quiet on the Western Front: A generation haunted by war By Isaac Finn on the World Socialist Web Site on August 5, 2016.

Click Here to Read: Erich Maria Remarque Biography on the Encyclopedia of World Biography Website.

Click Here to Read: All Quiet on the Western Front by Patrick Clardy on the Modernist Lab at Yale University website. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Erich Maria Remarque

Writer’s Wednesday: Irene Nemirovsky

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Click Here to Read: This Day in Jewish History 1942: Vichy Regime Unmoved by Author’s anti-Semitism, Arrests Her Anyway: Though Irene Nemirovsky was popular, converted, and wrote ‘about Jews without any tenderness,’ she and her husband would die in Auschwitz by David B. Green on the Haaretz website on July 13, 2016.

Click Here to Read: Irene Nemirovsky 1903 – 1942 by Sandy Flitterman-Lewis in the Jewish Women’s Archive Encyclopedia.

Click Here to Read: Assessing Jewish Identity of Author Killed by Nazis By Patricia Cohen in The New York Times on April 25, 2010. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Irene Nemirovsky

Writer’s Wednesday: Cynthia Ozick

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Click Here to Read: Cynthia Ozick on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Cynthia Ozick, The Art of Fiction No. 95 Interviewed by Tom Teicholz in the Parisian Review in the Spring 1987: No. 102 Issue.

Click Here to Read: Cynthia Ozick’s Long Crusade The author is considered one of the greatest fiction writers and critics alive today. At 88, she shows no signs of slowing down by Giles Harvey n in The New York Times Magazine on June 23, 2016. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Cynthia Ozick