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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Robert Stone , Madison Smartt BellPublisher: HarperCollins Publishers Inc Imprint: ECCO Press Weight: 0.308kg ISBN: 9780358505013ISBN 10: 0358505011 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 16 August 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsOne of Publishers Weekly's Top 10 Essays & Literary Criticism for Spring 2020 They called [Robert Stone] a prophet in his time. A writer of ideas and character. An American cross of Greene and Conrad, with a dash of ole' dead Melville for good measure...A new book of essays collects Stone's best and most penetrating political journalism...What unites The Eye You See With is Stone's staunch, singular vision. It's ironic, sad, hopeful. --Matt Gallagher, LitHub, Robert Stone's Journalism Set New Moral and Artistic High-Water Marks Fine pieces...Nonfiction can show [Stone] at his most playful. --Joy Williams, Bookforum Novelist Bell presents a sterling collection of essays on literature, culture, politics, and war by the late Stone (1937-2015), best known for his National Book Award-winning novel Dog Soldiers. Spanning the 1970s to the aughts, the essays demonstrates Stone's remarkable capacity for capturing an era's ethos while making larger, and still current, points...Throughout, Bell provides useful biographical information, which in combination with the essays provides a vivid portrait of Stone's background and guiding philosophy. Fans of Stone's novels will especially appreciate the insight, but any reader of narrative nonfiction will find plenty of interest in this fine collection. --Publishers Weekly This first collection of Stone's nonfiction, edited by his biographer, Madison Smartt Bell [...] showcases the same dizzying welter of ideas and passions that defines Stone's landmark fiction...In [Stone's essay] 'What Fiction Is For, ' he says that 'art is the only medium we have for removing a moment from the whirl of events and placing it under scrutiny in all its dimensions.' These essays, however, argue persuasively that, for Stone, nonfiction can do the same thing. --Booklist Robert Stone was one of those novelists who try to wrap their arms around America itself...A look back at the writer and his work, especially his earliest novels, turns out to be well timed. In books that deserve to endure, Stone anticipates the present in surprising, unsettling ways...[He was] a novelist who transformed our aspirations and follies into literature. --Ernesto Artillo, The Atlantic In addition to the biography, Child of Light, Bell has skillfully edited The Eye You See With, a broad selection of the novelist's articles, essays, and other nonfiction pieces. The subjects Stone wrote about, as in his novels, range from accounts of the ravages of war in Vietnam to richly textured travel pieces set in Havana, Jerusalem, and other hot spots in-between...Stone got it right about the war, of course, and the disastrous effects on a generation of Americans. In both his fiction and nonfiction, he spoke in a uniquely mordant voice, in language that rang true in both high and low registers. Stone looked the heart of darkness in the eye and never flinched...The Eye You See With should drive admirers back to the work that first galvanized Robert Stone's readers in the '70s and '80s. --Lee Polevoi, Highbrow Magazine One of Publishers Weekly' s Top 10 Essays & Literary Criticism for Spring 2020 They called [Robert Stone] a prophet in his time. A writer of ideas and character. An American cross of Greene and Conrad, with a dash of ole' dead Melville for good measure . . . A new book of essays collects Stone's best and most penetrating political journalism . . . What unites The Eye You See With is Stone's staunch, singular vision. It's ironic, sad, hopeful. --Matt Gallagher, LitHub, Robert Stone' s Journalism Set New Moral and Artistic High-Water Marks Fine pieces . . . Nonfiction can show [Stone] at his most playful. --Joy Williams, Bookforum Novelist Bell presents a sterling collection of essays on literature, culture, politics, and war by the late Stone (1937-2015), best known for his National Book Award-winning novel Dog Soldiers. Spanning the 1970s to the aughts, the essays demonstrate Stone's remarkable capacity for capturing an era's ethos while making larger, and still current, points . . . Throughout, Bell provides useful biographical information, which in combination with the essays provides a vivid portrait of Stone's background and guiding philosophy. Fans of Stone's novels will especially appreciate the insight, but any reader of narrative nonfiction will find plenty of interest in this fine collection. --Publishers Weekly This first collection of Stone's nonfiction, edited by his biographer, Madison Smartt Bell . . . showcases the same dizzying welter of ideas and passions that defines Stone' s landmark fiction . . . In [Stone's essay] 'What Fiction Is For, ' he says that 'art is the only medium we have for removing a moment from the whirl of events and placing it under scrutiny in all its dimensions.' These essays, however, argue persuasively that, for Stone, nonfiction can do the same thing. --Booklist Robert Stone was one of those novelists who try to wrap their arms around America itself . . . A look back at the writer and his work, especially his earliest novels, turns out to be well-timed. In books that deserve to endure, Stone anticipates the present in surprising, unsettling ways . . . [He was] a novelist who transformed our aspirations and follies into literature. --Ernesto Artillo, Atlantic In addition to the biography Child of Light, Bell has skillfully edited The Eye You See With, a broad selection of the novelist's articles, essays, and other nonfiction pieces. The subjects Stone wrote about, as in his novels, range from accounts of the ravages of war in Vietnam to richly textured travel pieces set in Havana, Jerusalem, and other hot spots in between . . . Stone got it right about the war, of course, and the disastrous effects on a generation of Americans. In both his fiction and nonfiction, he spoke in a uniquely mordant voice, in language that rang true in both high and low registers. Stone looked the heart of darkness in the eye and never flinched . . . The Eye You See With should drive admirers back to the work that first galvanized Robert Stone's readers in the '70s and '80s. --Lee Polevoi, Highbrow Magazine Author InformationRobert Stone is an Academy Award- and Emmy- nominated producer, director, writer and editor of unique, critically acclaimed feature-documentaries about American history, pop culture, mass media and the environment. His most recent feature documentary, Pandora's Promise, premiered at Sundance Film Festival in 2013. Stone's work has been screened and won awards at dozens of international film festivals and he has given talks at dozens of universities throughout the United States, Australia and Europe. He is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Directors Guild of America, Writers Guild of America and the Television Academy. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |