Dorothy Gallagher – författare
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7 produkter
7 produkter
Inbunden, Engelska, 2014
274 kr
Skickas inom 5-8 vardagar
From the prizewinning Jewish Lives series, a fresh look at Lillian Hellman’s restless life, her extraordinary plays, and her autobiographical myths“A fast-flowing, deeply provocative portrait of a seductive, truculent, and audacious literary powerhouse.”—BooklistGlamorous, talented, audacious—Lillian Hellman knew everyone, did everything, had been everywhere. By the age of twenty-nine she had written The Children’s Hour, the first of four hit Broadway plays, and soon she was considered a member of America’s first rank of dramatists, a position she maintained for more than twenty-five years. Apart from her literary accomplishments—eight original plays and three volumes of memoirs—Hellman lived a rich life filled with notable friendships, controversial political activity, travel, and love affairs, most importantly with Dashiell Hammett. But by the time she died, the truth about her life and works had been called into question. Scandals attached to her name, having to do with sex, with money, and with her own veracity. Dorothy Gallagher confronts the conundrum that was Lillian Hellman—a woman with a capacity to inspire outrage as often as admiration. Exploring Hellman’s leftist politics, her Jewish and Southern background, and her famous testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee, Gallagher also undertakes a new reading of Hellman’s carefully crafted memoirs and plays, in which she is both revealed and hidden. Gallagher sorts through the facts and the myths, arriving at a sharply drawn portrait of a woman who lived large to the end of her remarkable life and never backed down from a fight.About Jewish Lives: Jewish Lives is a prizewinning series of interpretative biography designed to explore the many facets of Jewish identity. Individual volumes illuminate the imprint of Jewish figures upon literature, religion, philosophy, politics, cultural and economic life, and the arts and sciences. Subjects are paired with authors to elicit lively, deeply informed books that explore the range and depth of the Jewish experience from antiquity to the present.In 2014, the Jewish Book Council named Jewish Lives the winner of its Jewish Book of the Year Award, the first series ever to receive this award.More praise for Jewish Lives:"Excellent" –New York Times"Exemplary" –Wall Street Journal"Distinguished" –New Yorker"Superb" –The Guardian
E-bok
Engelska, 2007222 kr
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Dorothy Gallagher’s critically acclaimed memoir, How I Came Into My Inheritance, told of her childhood in 1940s New York as the daughter of left-wing Russian Jewish immigrants. Time magazine called it “a piercingly funny book . . . unsentimental, breezy, blunt.” In Strangers in the House, this brilliant stylist takes us into her adult life and tells us honest, funny, and highly distinctive stories about love, friendship, and responsibilities–stories about ordinary life told in an extraordinarily compelling voice. As she puts it, with typical wryness, “Oh my goodness, the themes you stumble over as you make your way from day to day. Trust, Betrayal, Class, Hypocrisy, Love, Hate, Greed, Sickness, Health. It only needs War and Peace.” Here, among other people and problems, we encounter a man who carries around brass knuckles, hoping to catch the lover Gallagher prefers to him–and whose behavior unexpectedly mirrors Gallagher’s own; the bizarre events that surround the disappearance of a woman with ties to both the Communist Party and Gallagher’s family; and the treachery of a trusted employee who is “bad with money” in more ways than one. The fragility of friendships, the fickleness of love, the marital crisis brought on by chronic illness–Gallagher dramatizes these universal themes with unique feeling, insight, and humor. This is a writer who will turn readers who come to her book as strangers into friends.From the Hardcover edition.
E-bok
Engelska, 2008105 kr
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Here are two acclaimed memoirs in one remarkable volume. In an extraordinarily compelling voice, Dorothy Gallagher tells stories taking us from her parents’ beginnings in the Ukraine to her own childhood in 1940s New York, through the many adventures of her extended family and into her own adult life. Her themes are universal: the fragility of friendship, the power of love, the marital crisis brought on by chronic illness, the role of dumb luck at the heart of life–Gallagher dramatizes her stories with acute insight, strong feeling, and edgy wit.From the Trade Paperback edition.
Häftad, Engelska, 2015
208 kr
Skickas inom 3-6 vardagar
E-bok
Engelska, 2002222 kr
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Dorothy Gallagher began her literary career fabricating stories about celebrities for a pulp magazine. Nothing she invented, however, could rival the facts surrounding her own family.In a singular voice–intimate, fierce, hilarious–Gallagher takes you into the heart of her Russian Jewish heritage with stories as elegant and stylish as fiction. From the wrenching last stages of her parents’ lives, Gallagher moves back through time: to her parents’ beginnings, the adventures of her extended family, and the communist ideology to which they cling. Her aunt Lily sells lingerie to prostitutes; a family friend is found murdered in a bathtub; her cousin Meyer returns to the Ukraine to find his village near death from starvation; and a young Gallagher endures sessions in self-criticism at a Workers’ Children’s camp. Together these episodes tell the larger story of a generation living through tumultuous history, and record the acts of loving defiance of a daughter on her path to independence.From the Trade Paperback edition.
Inbunden, Tyska, 2021
259 kr
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E-bok
Tyska, 2021183 kr
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Dorothy Gallaghers Ehemann starb 2010. Jahrelang litt der Publizist und Verleger Ben Sonnenberg an Multipler Sklerose, war zuletzt beinahe vollständig gelähmt, doch sein wunderbarer, spielerischer Geist blieb ungetrübt. In Und was ich dir noch erzählen wollte bewegt sich Gallagher frei assoziierend zwischen Gegenwart und Vergangenheit, beschwört die gemeinsame Zeit mit ihrem Mann, seine letzten Tage, das Leben nach seinem Tod - allein, und in Gedanken doch immer bei ihm, in einer Welt, die heimgesucht wird von Erinnerungen, Erinnerungen, die ihr zugleich oft Trost bedeuten. Offen und unprätentiös spricht sie über die kleinen Dinge ihres Alltags in New York, den Umzug in eine neue Wohnung, wie sie sich dort einrichtet, auf der Dachterrasse Tomaten zieht, ihre zwei Hunde und die Katze Bones, wie sehr ihr die eleganten Anzüge ihres Mannes fehlen, aber auch seine zärtlichen, sehr britischen Liebesbekundungen. Gallaghers Mutter, am Ende besiegt von der Demenz, ist auch da, zusammen mit vielen Freunden, einer alten Schreibmaschine und einem Foto, nie aufgenommen, aber umso bedeutsamer für Gallaghers Beziehung zu ihrem verstorbenen Mann. Was Dorothy Gallagher hier erzählt, mag gewöhnlich erscheinen, doch wie sie es tut, lakonisch und tiefgründig, ist einmalig. Dieses schmale, zutiefst berührende Buch entfaltet die Beziehungsgeschichte eines Paares, Logik und Mysterium ihres Zusammenseins, erzählt von unheilbarem Verlust und unendlicher Liebe und destilliert so die Essenz des Lebens.