George Garrett: The Elizabethan TrilogyBrooke Horvath, Irving Malin Texas Review Press, 1998 - 205 sayfa This new volume is a collection of essays and poems on George Garrett's best-selling trilogy of Elizabethan England: Death of the Fox, The Succession, and Entered from the Sun. Contributors of the essays include Richard Betts, "'To Dream of Kings': George Garrett's The Succession"; Nicholas Delbanco, "The Succession: A Novel of Elizabeth and James"; Joseph Dewey, "'A Golden Age for Fanta-sticks': Imagination, Faith, and Mistery in Entered from the Sun"; R. H. W. Dillard, "The Elizabethan Novels: Death of the Fox and The Succession"; Thomas Fleming, "The Historical Consciousness of George Garrett"; Reginald Gibbons, "George Garrett's Whole New World: The Succession"; Steven G. Kellman, "Who Killed Kit Marlowe? Who Wants to Know?"; Irving Malin, "Hermetic Fox-Hunting"; Joseph W. Reed, "Settling Marlowe's Hash"; W. R. Robinson, "Imagining the Individual: George Garrett's Death of the Fox"; David R. Slavitt, "A Twentieth Century Fox--in the Warner Brothers' Chicken Coop"; Monroe K. Spears, "George Garrett and the Historical Novel" and "A Trilogy Complete, A Past Recaptured"; Walter Sullivan, "Time Past and Time Present: Garrett's Entered from the Sun"; Richard Tillinghast, "The Fox, Gloriana, Kit Marlowe, and Sundry"; Tom Whalen, "Eavesdropping in the Dark: The Opening(s) of George Garrett's Entered from the Sun"; Allen Wier, "The Scars of Flesh and Spirit or How He Pictures It: George Garrett's Entered from the Sun Brendan Galvin ("Your Messenger of 1566") and Laurence Goldstein ("In Praise of Entered from the Sun") contribute poems to the volume. Fred Chappell notes in the introduction that "the trilogy swarms me over: it is full to bursting with a history that seems to have more complexity than the actual life I am living and it has caused me to interpret in its terms events I witness firsthand and even participate in." |
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action actor Alysoun Barfoot beginning Captain Barfoot century characters Christian Christmastide Christopher Marlowe contemporary courtier create critical dark Dealey Plaza Dillard dream Elizabeth and James Elizabethan trilogy England English epigraph essay Essex fact faith finally future Garrett's imagination Garrett's novel George Garrett ghosts historical fiction historical novel human imagination individual Ingram Frizer Jacobean Joseph Hunnyman kind King letters literary lives London Marlowe's death meaning memory Messenger mind motives murder mystery narrative narrator never Novel of Elizabeth novelist Oliver Stone paradox paragraph past Paul Cartwright perhaps person play player plot poem poet present priest reader reality reivers Review Robert Cecil sense Simon Forman Sir Robert Cecil Sir Walter Ralegh soldier speak story Succession tale tell theme things truth turn Virginia Quarterly Review vision voice words writing