Item type | Current library | Collection | Class number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Standard loan | Library Services Main collection | Print books | 848.91409 BEC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 16084003 |
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848.912 GEN/SAR Saint Genet : actor & martyr | 848.914 BAU The diving-bell and the butterfly | 848.91409 BEA Tete a tete : the lives and loves of Simone de Beauvoir & Jean-Paul Sartre | 848.91409 BEC Samuel Beckett : the last modernist | 848.91409 COH Just play : Beckett's theater | 848.92 ART Artaud on theatre | 850 ALV Gente in Aspromonte |
0586090762
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Intensely private, possibly saintly, but perhaps misanthropic, Samuel Beckett was the most legendary and enigmatic of writers. Anthony Cronin's biography is a revelation of this mythical figure as fully human and fallible, while confirming his enormous stature both as a man and a writer. Cronin explores how the sporty schoolboy of solid Protestant bourgeois stock became a prizewinning student at Trinity, flirted with scholarship, and, in Paris, found himself at the center of its literary avant-garde as an intimate friend of James Joyce. But he was a young man who struggled with complexities in his own nature as well as with problems of literary expression. In the small provincial city of Kassel, Germany, the cosmopolitan Beckett experienced a faltering entanglement with his cousin--one of the first in a series of problematic encounters with women. The war years, which he spent as a member of the Resistance and a refugee in the South of France, brought Beckett the self-probings and discoveries that led to the great works.
2019
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