Subject:
Library of America Preserves, Spreads American Literature ... |
From:
"Sandy P. Klein" <spklein52@hotmail.com> |
Date:
Sun, 03 Sep 2006 06:43:11 -0400 |
To:
spklein52@hotmail.com |
30 August 2006
Reasonably priced volumes popularize classic works for a worldwide audience
By Michael Jay FriedmanIn 1962, the renowned literary critic Edmund Wilson proposed to his
friend, publisher Jason Epstein, the need for "a complete and compact
form of the principal American classics." "It is absurd that our most
read and studied writers should not be available in their entirety in
any convenient form," Wilson wrote.
[. . .]
A DIVERSE LITERATURE FOR A DIVERSE PEOPLE
Novelists and playwrights of the American South are prominently represented through the works of James Agee, William Faulkner and Tennessee Williams, women by Edith Wharton, Willa Cather and Gertrude Stein. Immigrant writers from Isaac Bashevis Singer to Vladimir Nabokov are here.
[. . .]