3.0
Departures
By Paul Zweig & Adam GopnikPublisher Description
Departures is Paul Zweig’s celebration of life and love. Zweig thought of himself as a sojourner, a contemporary Wandering Jew, a man with “a loose wire in his genes.” He led a number of distinct lives: as a Jewish child in Brooklyn and on a farm in the Catskills; as a literature student at Columbia; as a young exile who spent a decade in Paris transforming himself into a French intellectual, absorbing the language, sex, culture, and leftist politics; and as an American man-of-letters who produced a steady stream of poems, essays, and wide-ranging works of literary scholarship and criticism. In 1978, at the age of forty-three, he abruptly entered a new life—”the life of the dying”—which he inhabited for the next six years. His writing was guided by a steely determination to hold the more pressing and distorting sentiments— self-pity, regret, anger, fear—at bay for the sake of his lucidity, which became his way through the world of cancer. This memoir stands as a testament to the passion and spirit with which Zweig lived and to the dignity that he brought to his final years.
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3.0
dana dalloway
Created almost 13 years agoShare
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“Adam Gopnik, the god of my idolatry, wrote a foreword to this book. now out of print, so I picked it up. The opening section, while written with the lyricism that apparently characterized Zweig's poetry, it focuses on his predominantly sex life. Actually, it focuses on his sex life in Paris, so that made it engaging, but he is far to self-effacing about interesting episodes like sailing over to France without speaking a word of French and living on his own for a year, or what exactly he did for the Algerian independence guerillas, or, for that matter, the cancer that suddenly appeaed after a twenty year jump in the middle of the memoir. It was so evocatively written that I could almost picture certain Parisian streets, but I need a little less interiority and a little more plot to drive a narrative along. Beautifully written --”
About Paul Zweig
Paul Zweig grew up in Brooklyn, but left New York to explore Paris in the 1950s. After a decade in France, he returned to America and established himself as a respected poet, critic, and professor. He wrote five books in the last ten years of his life: Departures, Walt Whitman: The Making of a Poet, The Heresy of Self-Love, Three Journeys: An Automythology, and The Adventurer: The Fate of Adventure in the Western World.
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