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Book

Title The new Oxford book of literary anecdotes / edited by John Gross
Published Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2006

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  820.08502 G8782/N  AVAILABLE
Description xiii, 385 pages ; 24 cm
Summary "A collection of literary gossip and intimate sidelights on the lives of the authors." "The dictionary defines an anecdote as 'a short account of an entertaining or interesting incident', and the anecdotes in this collection more than live up to that description. Many of them are funny, often explosively so. Others are touching, outrageous, sinister, inspiring, or downright weird. They show writers in the English-speaking world from Chaucer to the present acting both unpredictably, and deeply in character. The range is wide - this is a book which finds room for Milton and Margaret Atwood, George Eliot and P. G. Wodehouse, Chinua Achebe and Ian Fleming, Brendan Behan and Wittgenstein. It is also a book in which you can find out which great historian's face was once mistaken for a baby's bottom, which film star left a haunting account of Virginia Woolf not long before her death, and what Agatha Christie really thought of Hercule Poirot."--BOOK JACKET
Notes Includes index
Subject Authors, English -- Anecdotes.
English literature -- Anecdotes.
Genre/Form Anecdotes.
Author Gross, John, 1935-2011.
LC no. 2005033698
ISBN 9780192804686 acidfree paper
0192804685 acid-free paper