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Book Cover for: Finding a Form, William H. Gass

Finding a Form

William H. Gass

"No one is better than William H. Gass at communicating the sublime and rapturous excitement of reading." Washington Post

Book Details

  • Publisher: Dalkey Archive Press
  • Publish Date: Aug 25th, 2009
  • Pages: 354
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.38in - 5.81in - 1.04in - 1.04lb
  • EAN: 9781564785299
  • Categories: • Essays

About the Author

Gass, William H.: - William Gaddis (1922-98) stands among the greatest American writers of the twentieth century. The winner of two National Book Awards (for "J R" [1976] and "A Frolic of His Own" [1995]), he wrote five novels during his lifetime, including "Carpenter's Gothic "(1985), "Agap? Agape" (published posthumously in 2002), and his early masterpiece "The Recognitions" (1955). He is loved and admired for his stylistic innovations, his unforgettable characters, his pervasive humor, and the breadth of his intellect and vision.

More books by William H. Gass

Book Cover for: Omensetter's Luck, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: In the Heart of the Heart of the Country: And Other Stories, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: The Tunnel, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: On Being Blue: A Philosophical Inquiry, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: World Within the Word, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: Eyes: Novellas and Stories, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: Cartesian Sonata and Other Novellas, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: Tests of Time, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: Finding a Form: Towards a Response Contagion Theory of Persuasion, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: Middle C, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: The William H. Gass Reader, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: Reading Rilke Reflections on the Problems of Translations, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: Willie Masters' Lonesome Wife, William H. Gass
Book Cover for: Review of Contemporary Fiction: Summer 2005 Vol. 25, No. 2, Robert Lowery
Book Cover for: Reading Rilke: Reflections on the Problems of Translation, William H. Gass

Praise for this book

In his first gathering of essays in several years, novelist and critic Gass's commitment to ideas, concentrated energy and originality shine through on every page . . . Gass's deeply felt essays . . . are quotable, flecked with fertile insights and a pleasure to read.
William H. Gass is embattled . . . and in Finding a Form he confronts the conundrum of the writer that he has faced in previous essays: the word is sacred. Though there are no longer sacred texts, 'writing puts the writer in illusory command of the world, empowers someone otherwise powerless, but with a power no more pointed than a pencil' . . . Against the odds, William Gass, a tortured man in the attic, has empowered himself to write scripture in an unredemptive time.

No one is better than William H. Gass at communicating the sublime and rapturous excitement of reading.--Washington Post