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Creationists: Selected Essays 1993-2006 by E.L. Doctorow

Creationists: Selected Essays 1993-2006

by E.L. Doctorow


Title Details

Author
Narrator
Publisher
 
Unabridged Edition
Running Time
6 Hrs.

Description

E. L. Doctorow is acclaimed internationally for such novels as "Ragtime, Billy Bathgate," and "The March." Here now are his rich, revelatory essays on the nature of imaginative thought. In "Creationists," Doctorow considers creativity in its many forms, from the literary to the comic to the cosmic. As he wrestles with the subjects that have teased and fired his own imagination, Doctorow affirms that "we know by what we create."

Just what is Melville doing in Moby-Dick? How did "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" impel Mark Twain to the radical rewrite that we know as "Huckleberry Finn?" Can we ever trust what novelists say about their own work? How could Franz Kafka have written a book called "Amerika" without ever leaving Europe? In posing such questions, Doctorow grapples with literary creation not as a critic or as a scholar-but as one working writer frankly contemplating the work of another. It's a perspective that affords him both protean grace and profound insight.

Among the essays collected here are Doctorow's musings on the very different Spanish Civil War novels of Ernest Hemingway and Andre Malraux; a candid assessment of Edgar Allan Poe as our "greatest bad writer"; and a bracing analysis of the story of Genesis, in which God figures as the most complex and riveting character.

In examining the creative works of different times and disciplines, Doctorow also reveals the source and nature of his own artistry. Rich in aphorism and anecdote, steeped in history and psychology, informed by a lifetime of reading and writing, "Creationists" opens a magnificent window into one of the great creative minds of our time.


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