The Author: Shawn Holliday is Assistant Professor of English at Alice Lloyd College in Pippa Passes, Kentucky. He received his Ph.D. in literature and criticism at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. He has published widely in literary journals.
The conventional critical wisdom these days virtually reduces Thomas Wolfe to the status of an idiot savant who poured out words that editors Max Perkins and Edward Aswell shaped into literature. Shawn Holliday compellingly challenges this view, argues that Wolfe's editors did his work more harm than good, and makes a persuasive case for a reevaluation of Wolfe's place among modernist writers. 'Thomas Wolfe and the Politics of Modernism' should be a welcome addition to every college library and must reading for any scholar interested in taking a fresh look at America's modernist canon. (John Teel, Marshall University) Shawn Holliday places Thomas Wolfe on the literary landscape of modernism in this clear and convincing study. Scholars and other patrons of libraries, bookstores, and online services can explore this critical map to find out more about Wolfe as well as other writers including William Faulkner, Henry Miller, Jack Kerouac, Edward Abbey, Ray Bradbury, and Pat Conroy. (James W. Clark, Jr., North Carolina State University)
Ask a Question About this Product More... |