Let the Wind Speak


Mary De Rachewiltz and Ezra Pound

Price:
Sale price$92.99
Stock:
Temporarily out of stock. Order now & we'll deliver when available

By Carol Shloss
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
277

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Carol Loeb Shloss is Former Acting Professor of English at Stanford University and author of Lucia Joyce: To Dance in the Wake.

"[A] meticulous literary biography...Shloss illuminates the complexities of Mary's life [and]...captures her 'fiercely principled' subject and the times in which she lived, using impressive research to highlight the obstacles she navigated to secure her father's literary legacy. Pound scholars will appreciate new insights into his personal life." (Publishers Weekly) "In this deeply researched biography of an extraordinary and fascinating living person, Carol Loeb Shloss uncovers web upon web of the lies, secrets, and silences that entangled Mary de Rachewiltz even before her birth as Mary Rudge in 1925 in Bressanone, Italy (formerly Austria). What other major writer's child has a life story that intersects at all points with both international geopolitics and her father's boundary-crossing, world-making poetry and poetics; with the after-effects of one world war and the lived experience of another; with the hidden causes and devastating effects of Italian and Allied spy networks, including Hoover's FBI, whose abuse of the law came to daylight in the Watergate investigation; with the contending by lawyers, scholars, and libraries over a valuable international literary estate? Let the Wind Speak casts new light on Ezra Pound's controversial yet indispensable life and work through the lens of his daughter's life, full of twists, turns, surprises, and mysteries, some of them still unsolved. As a portrait of Mary de Rachewiltz, it captures a moving image of its courageous subject-an eloquent poet, writer, and translator in her own right-as she navigates formidable familial, political, literary, and legal terrains over a turbulent century with forbearance, grace, and creative love." (Christine Froula, Northwestern University)

You may also like

Recently viewed