Unpublished interviews with the man himself, plus the personal
recollections of those who knew him throughout the many facets of
his life, make this a revealing portrait of one of the towering
figures of 20th century literature, Samuel Beckett. The book also
includes many previously unpublished photographs of Beckett and his
circle.
Samuel Beckett, one of the towering figures of twentieth-century
literature, was also famously reclusive. In these intimate
interviews conducted by his biographer, James Knowlson, Beckett and
his family, friends and contemporaries reveal more of the writer s
human side than ever before. Beckett himself talks of his early
youth, his friendship with James Joyce and his Resistance work in
Paris during the Second World War. Some of his closest friends
remember him both as a schoolboy and struggling young writer, while
his students at Trinity College, Dublin give their opinions of him
as a lecturer. Esteemed actors, writers and directors, including
Billie Whitelaw, Edward Albee and J. M. Coetzee, remember Beckett
at the time of his international success. The result is a vivid
collection of first-hand experiences, a tribute to a remarkable
novelist, poet and dramatist.
"A volume that admirers will seize on hungrily for its details, and for the many photographs - Refreshing and enlightening. I closed the book eager to go back to the masterworks." (Kevin Jackson, Sunday Times)
'A volume that admirers will seize on hungrily for its details, and for the many photographs ... Refreshing and enlightening. I closed the book eager to go back to the masterworks' Kevin Jackson, Sunday Times 'These humanising glimpses are a treat for the Beckett fan ... The Knowlsons have assembled, in this scholarly but charming book, a mosaic of epiphanies ... while going some way to demystify the great Unknowable' Independent 'Beckett is surpassingly the modern author whose life rewards such devotion' Evening Standard 'Magnificently enriched by a series of interviews spread over a decade between Professor James Knowlson and Beckett' Glasgow Herald
James Knowlson is Emeritus Professor of French at the University of Reading where he founded the Beckett Archive (now the Beckett International Foundation). He was a friend of Samuel Beckett for twenty years and is his authorised biographer, publishing Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett with Bloomsbury in 1996. Dr Elizabeth Knowlson lectured in French at the University of Glasgow from 1961 to 1969. After having three children, she resumed her university career as an administrator at the Centre for Applied Language Studies in the University of Reading, before leaving her post to assist her husband with his biography of Beckett and his later books and essays.
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