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    Savage Beauty - The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay

    Nancy Milford, Edna St. Vincent Millay

    Random House Trade Paperback
    2002
    608 páginas
    20h 16m
    ISBN-13: 9780375760815
    3
    1 avaliação
    Leram4Lendo0Querem31Relendo0Abandonos1Resenhas0
    Favoritos0Desejados31Avaliaram1

    Fans of Zelda, Nancy Milford's groundbreaking (and bestselling) biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald's tortured wife and muse, have been waiting impatiently since 1970 for Milford's promised follow-up about poet Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950). It's finally here, and they will not be disappointed. Milford's vivid narrative limns an electric personality with psychological acuity while capturing the freewheeling atmosphere of America in the turbulent years following World War I. After "Renascence" was published (when she was only 20) and she moved to Greenwich Village, Millay was the queen of bohemia, taking lovers with zest and voicing the reckless gaiety of a generation in her famous lyric, "My candle burns at both ends; / It will not last the night; / But, ah, my foes, and, oh, my friends-- / It gives a lovely light." With her flame-red hair, milk-white skin, and a voice that thrilled audiences (making her poetry readings a welcome source of income), Millay was the archetypal "new woman": powerful, passionate, and not to be ignored. But Milford makes it clear that her first loyalty was to her mother and sisters, and her deepest commitment to her writing. This juicy chronicle has famous names aplenty--critic Edmund Wilson and Masses editor Floyd Dell were among the men devastated by her refusal to be faithful--and lots of dissipation: Millay drank heavily and became addicted to morphine. It also takes a perceptive look at how an artist draws material from her life and at the strategies she uses to protect the wellsprings of creativity. Brief passages interspersed throughout delineating Milford's interactions with Norma Millay, the poet's younger sister and literary executor, might have been self-indulgent and self-aggrandizing; instead they offer intriguing snapshots of the complex process by which biography is made. The resulting book is a tour de force, and wildly entertaining as well.

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    Nancy Milford

    Nancy Milford é um biógrafa norte-americana, reconhecida por seu livro <i>Zelda</i>, onde abordou a vida da esposa do escritor americano F. Scott Fitzgerald, Zelda Fitzgerald. A biografia se iniciou como sua dissertação de mestrado e foi publicado em 1970, ganhando grande reconhecimento. Tornou-se finalista do Prêmio Pulitzer e o National Book Award, permanecendo na lista de mais-vendidos do New York Times durante 29 semanas e sendo traduzido para mais de 17 idiomas. Também publicou a biografia da poetisa Edna St. Vincent Millay, chamada <i>Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay</i> em 2001. Também atuou como professora universitária, dando aula em diversas universidades americanas, como University of Michigan, Princeton University, Brown University, Vassar College, New York University, Bennington College, Briarcliff College, e Bard College.

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    Nancy Milford