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Overview
"Writers are both born and made, and their teachers share in the making of them, but in what ways?" Molly McQuade asks in An Unsentimental Education, a collection of candid interviews with twenty-one of our leading novelists and poets. Presented as first-person essays, the interviews are with contemporary writers who have studied, taught at, or cultivated other ties with the University of Chicago. The book provides an occasion for the writers to reflect on their Chicago experiences and on ideas about education in general. What education does a writer need? How can formal learning impel the writing life? What school stories or tales told out of school do Philip Roth, Hayden Carruth, Marguerite Young, George Steiner, Charles Simic, Susan Sontag, and Saul Bellow have in store and want to share.
Interviews with:Saul Bellow, Paul Carroll, Hayden Carruth, Robert Coover, Leon Forrest, June Jordan, Janet Kauffman, Morris Philipson, M. L. Rosenthal, Philip Roth, Susan Fromberg Shaeffer, Charles Simic, Susan Sontag, George Starbuck, George Steiner, Richard Stern, Nathaniel Tarn, Douglas Unger, Kurt Vonnegut, and Marguerite Young.
Synopsis
"Writers are both born and made, and their teachers share in the making of them, but in what ways?" Molly McQuade asks in An Unsentimental Education, a collection of candid interviews with twenty-one of our leading novelists and poets. Presented as first-person essays, the interviews are with contemporary writers who have studied, taught at, or cultivated other ties with the University of Chicago. The book provides an occasion for the writers to reflect on their Chicago experiences and on ideas about education in general. What education does a writer need? How can formal learning impel the writing life? What school stories or tales told out of school do Philip Roth, Hayden Carruth, Marguerite Young, George Steiner, Charles Simic, Susan Sontag, and Saul Bellow have in store and want to share.
Interviews with:Saul Bellow, Paul Carroll, Hayden Carruth, Robert Coover, Leon Forrest, June Jordan, Janet Kauffman, Morris Philipson, M. L. Rosenthal, Philip Roth, Susan Fromberg Shaeffer, Charles Simic, Susan Sontag, George Starbuck, George Steiner, Richard Stern, Nathaniel Tarn, Douglas Unger, Kurt Vonnegut, and Marguerite Young.
Publishers Weekly
This could have seemed a rather parochial notion, interviewing celebrated alumni of a single university for a locally published volume. In fact, partly because of the remarkable nature of the institution itself, partly because of the extremely distinguished authors involved-and also because of former PW editor McQuade's tactful and probing interviews-the book makes for highly stimulating reading. The University of Chicago, in the postwar decades largely covered here, was an extraordinary place, creating, through the leadership of president Robert Hutchins and a sterling faculty, a standard of intellectual attainment seldom matched in American academia. The 21 writers represented here-Susan Sontag, Kurt Vonnegut, George Steiner, Charles Simic, Philip Roth, Saul Bellow, Robert Coover, June Jordan, etc.-all pay tribute to the impact the university had on their imaginations, and among them create an almost tangible sense of the kind of intellectual ferment that seems irretrievably lost. Most of the interviews have been edited by McQuade into first-person monologues that read smoothly, yet with the idiosyncrasies of their subjects intact; Bellow and Coover opt instead for Q&A formats. (June)