Carlos Baker
Personal Information
Description
American teacher, novelist, and critic known for biographies of Ernest Hemingway and Percy Bysshe Shelley
Books
Emerson among the eccentrics
When Carlos Baker died in 1987, he had completed all but the finishing touches on what will be considered his masterpiece. An esteemed literary critic and mentor to several generations of younger scholars, Carlos Baker had a lifelong interest in the writers of the American Renaissance, particularly in Ralph Waldo Emerson, its intellectual centerpiece, but also in Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Amos Bronson Alcott, and Margaret Fuller, all of whom made Concord a mecca for American intellectuals, with Emerson undoubtedly its foremost citizen. Lucky for us that in his last years Carlos Baker poured his resources, wisdom, and affections into this remarkable book. Emerson Among the Eccentrics is that rarest of accomplishments: a magnificent biography that functions equally as a group portrait and a highly detailed reconstruction of an entire area. Carlos Baker was indefatigable in going through all of the principal characters, journals, and correspondence to reconstruct, minutely, entire days; the result is a vivid and textured mosaic not just of the group's interrelationships but of their daily lives - what they ate, what they wore, what they did for entertainment, what they valued and what they did not, how they "managed" life. All of this, though, went to serve Baker's larger aim and hope of bringing Emerson to life in his quotidian relationships: as young man and old; husband, father, son, and brother; preacher, lecturer, editor, and clubman; farmer, householder, host, and guest.
Hemingway
This new biography focuses on the complex Hemingway when fame is hitting full force - the years between A Farewell to Arms and the writing of For Whom The Bell Tolls. In a sympathetic narrative, Michael Reynolds creates a rich map of Hemingway's journey from promising young novelist to literary lion. He gives us the look and feel of the times and the people, as well as the give and take of literary life. These are the years of Hemingway's Esquire essays and war dispatches, the years that produced "Snows of Kilimanjaro" and Green Hills of Africa, years from which emerged the larger-than-life Hemingway. We come away from this book knowing more about what Hemingway wrote and why. We also know more about where we as a people have been, for Hemingway explored every element of his decade with the intensity of a natural historian. Drawing on a wealth of new material and period documents, Reynolds adds a human touch to a writer too often seen only in caricature.
Hemingway, the writer as artist
An observer laments the lonely life of a teenage suicide whose neighbors didn't even know his name.
The land of Rumbelow
Recuperating from an almost fatal holdup, Dan Sherwood becomes intrigued by the mysterious past of renowned American novelist Nicholas Kemp.
Hemingway and his critics
Includes criticism of Ernest Hemingway by Andre Maurois, Edmund Wilson, Lionel Trilling, and H.E. Bates, among others.
Ernest Hemingway
The echoing green
A social history of nineteenth century England and the United States as reflected in the biographies, diaries, and letters of contemporary people.
Strange Maine
Tales of Horror, Mysteries of the Sea, Science Fiction & Magic