"One of the most sinuous stylists and searching minds of the twentieth century."--Washington Post
John Jeremiah Sullivan lives in Wilmington, North Carolina, and is a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine. He is the author of the book Blood Horses: Notes of a Sportswriter's Son and the essay collection Pulphead. His awards include the Whiting Award, the National Magazine Award, the James Beard Writing Award, and the Windham-Campbell Prize.
Guy Davenport was a writer of fiction, illustrator, teacher, scholar, translator, poet, and critic. Mr. Davenport published over 40 books, among them collections of short stories, translations from the Greek, illustrated works, a novel, and critical studies on literature, culture, and art.
"Guy Davenport [was] a writer who contained multitudes. The Geography of the Imagination, his masterwork, is as protean and plentiful as its author....What aren't the 40 essays in it about? Davenport was too delighted in 'rhymes, or affinities, ' as he put it, to tackle one subject at a time. Accordingly, a rumination on cave painting is also a reflection on Pablo Picasso; a musing on the 19th-century art critic John Ruskin is also a meditation on labyrinths....He did not write to impress or intimidate -- though he may have done both inadvertently -- but rather to articulate his awe. The same man who enjoyed explicating the most arcane allusions in Pound's impenetrabilia also observed, earnestly and beautifully, 'Two lives we lead: in the world and in our minds. Only a work of art can show us how to do it.' "
--Washington Post "Davenport's insights approach the pyrotechnical, but his prose is approachable, never pedantic....Effortlessly, unabashedly learned; tender beneath its professional carapace....Davenport's criticism feels so self-contained that one swallows it with the hungry thoughtlessness of an eternal student." --Harper's