📄 Extracted Text (1,198 words)
From: How To Academy <[email protected]>
To: j <[email protected]>
Subject: Major new Great Writers series. Will Self on Ulysses, Saul Bellow, Henry James, Dostoevsky and
more.
Date:Tue, 07 Jul 2015 13:47:38 +0000
Lo: Read — The Great Writers Series
EFTA01206486
how to: read a book one day, and my whole life was
Read — The Great changed'— Orhan Pamuk
Writers Series
In the Great Writers series, the How To Academy have
invited a host of distinguished writers and critics to
Wednesdays, 6:30-8:OOpm introduce a monumental work of their choice. Whether
it's Ulysses or Alice in Wonderland, Herzog or The
Waterstones, Piccadilly Brothers Karamazov, you will come away equipped to
make the book a friend for life.
16th September 11th November
: •James Joyce, Ulysses : •Thomas De Quincey, Confessions of
with Will Self an English Opium-Eater
with Frances Wilson
30th September
: •Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in 25th November
Wonderland, : •Henry James, The Spoils of Poynton
EFTA01206487
with Robert Douglas-Fairhurst with Jonathan Keates
14th October 9th December
: •Saul Bellow: Herzog : •Dostoevsky, The Brothers
with Zachary Leader Karamazov
with Paul Keegan
28th October
: •F Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby
with Sarah Churchwell
16th September
James Joyce, Ulysses, with Will Self
'I hold this book to be the most important
expression which the present age has found; it is a
book to which we are all indebted, and from which
none of us can escape' - T S Eliot
Divided into eighteen sections, it contains a quarter of a million
words. Modeled on Homer's Odyssey. it is based on the events
of June 16, 1922 and includes, said Joyce, 'so many enigmas
and puzzles that it will keep the professors busy for centuries'. It
is. said Anthony Burgess 'inimitable, and also possibly mad'. So
what better person to take on the possibly mad challenge of
introducing Ulysses in an hour and a half than the inimitable Wilt
Self?
EFTA01206488
Gr
Gr
30th September
Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in
Wonderland, with Robert Douglas-
Fairhurst
`Why, sometimes I've believed in six impossible
things before breakfast'
Alice in Wonderland has been feeding the imaginations of
children for the last 150 years. But what do Humpty Dumpty's
riddles mean, and why have the Dodo, the Mock Turtle, the Mad
Hatter, and the queen of Hearts embedded themselves so
powerfully in our culture? In this magical mystery tour, Robert
Douglas-Fairhurst, author of The Story of Alice, will lead us back
down the rabbit hole in order to unravel Lewis Carroll's world of
nonsense.
EFTA01206489
Professor Robert Douglas•Fairhurst is Tortoise in English
Language and Literature at Magdalen College, Oxford. 'Why did
you call him Tortoise if he wasn't one?' Alice asked. 'We called
him Tortoise because he taught us,' said the Mock Turtle angrily.
EFTA01206490
14th October
Saul Bellow, Herzog, with Zachary
Leader
'People don't realize how much they are in the grip
of ideas. We live among ideas much more than we
live in nature' - Saul Bellow
Meet Moses E. Herzog: charmer, cuckold, sufferer, survivor, and
the central intelligence of the greatest American novel. In the
semi-autobiographical Herzog, Saul Bellow holds us captive
inside the brilliant. energetic. and idea-driven consciousness of
his forty-seven year old hero, a man grappling with his failures as
a father, husband, teacher, and writer.
The Life of Saul Bellow: To Fame and Fortune, 1915.1964, the
recently published first volume of Zachary Leader's two volume
biography, is similarly captivating. Join Professor Leader on a
perilous journey into the Herzog's world.
Ili
EFTA01206491
a
28th October
F Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby,
with Sara Churchwell
'The first step that American fiction has taken since
Henry James'- TS Eliot.
In the doomed love affair between Jay Gatsby and Daisy
Buchanan, F. Scott Fitzgerald saw into the heart of his nation.
The Great Gatsby is a cautionary tale about the American dream,
the invention of the self and the iniquities of inequality, but it also
documents a precise historical moment whose significance is lost
to the contemporary reader. The world of New York in 1922 is not
the one we think we know: Sarah Churchwell has unearthed the
true story, including a forgotten tale of adultery and murder that
helped inspire Fitzgerald.
EFTA01206492
Sarah Churchwell is Professor of American Literature and
Public Understanding of the Humanities. Her latest book,
Careless People: Murder, Mayhem and the Invention of the Great
Gatsby, was published in 2013.
EFTA01206493
Gr
11th November
Thomas De Quincey, Confessions of an
English Opium-Eater, with Frances
Wilson
'I wonder if I could have existed without Thomas De
Quincey?'— Jorge Luis Borges
This is the book that Dostoevsky took with him to Siberia, that
inspired Baudelaire's Les Paradis Artificial, to which George
Orwell paid homage in Down and Out in Paris and London,
sections of which James Joyce knew by heart, on which Guy
DeBord based the foundations of psychogeography. and without
which we would not have Wilkie Collins or Arthur Conan Doyle.
But what did Thomas De Quincey have to confess, and why are
we still shocked?
In anticipation of her forthcoming biography, Guilty Thing: An
Inner Life of Thomas De Quincey, Frances Wilson will unlock
the meanings of one of the seminal texts of the Romantic Age.
ri
EFTA01206494
25th November
Henry James, The Spoils of Poynton,
with Jonathan Keates
'Blindfold, in the dark, with the brush of a finger, I
could tell one from another. They're living things to
me; they know me, they return the touch of my
hand'- The Spoils of Poynton
Poynton is filled with Mrs Gereth's precious antiques, but Owen,
her son and heir, is engaged to a woman too vulgar to appreciate
their beauties. This is the premise of James's most loved novel, a
brief masterpiece about the tyranny of good taste. Jonathan
Keates is a novelist, biographer and chairman of Venice in Peril
fund. A devotee of Henry James, there is no better critic to take
us to the critical heart of this witty and insightful work.
EFTA01206495
'To criticize is to appreciate, to appropriate, to take intellectual
possession, to establish a fine relation with the criticized thing
and to make it one's own' - Henry James.
;2J
EFTA01206496
9th December
Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov,
with Paul Keegan
`One of the most magnificent novels ever written' —
Sigmund Freud
Dostoevsky's nightmarish novel, the story of a penny-pinching
lecher and his four sons, is one the supreme achievements in
literature. Set in Russia on the brink of socialist ferment, The
Brothers Karamazov is a study of patricide, a satire on human
corruption, and a complex spiritual drama. 'The thing about
Dostoevsky's characters', said David Foster Wallace, 'is that
they are alive'; in this seminar, Paul Keegan, former editor of
Penguin Classics, will discuss the astounding vitality of this
monumental work.
EFTA01206497
;.,'
n partnership with
;.,'
EFTA01206498
F e.
Copyright O 2015 How To Academy. All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in our website http://howtoacademy.com and indicated you wished
to receive news about courses and offers.
Our mailing address is:
How To Academy
11 Aldridge Road Villas
London. England W11 1BL
United Kingdom
Add us to your address book
how to: unsubscribe update subscription preferences
EFTA01206499
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
9207268872008018bf9ceb4ecf1b0bc23c3b3c41975c984e02ea58ecc98cab49
Bates Number
EFTA01206486
Dataset
DataSet-9
Document Type
document
Pages
14
Comments 0