The Starched Blue Sky of Spain and Other Memoirs

Summary
In the 1930s, journalist and novelist Josephine Herbst (1892-1969) was widely regarded as one of the most important women writers in America. Yet the conservative climate of World War II and the ensuing Cold War relegated Herbst - like other radical writers of the interwar period - to almost total obscurity. By the 1960s, when Herbst composed the autobiographical essays in this collection, the insight of radical writers was being re-evaluated and appreciated once again.
Herbst's reminiscences provide brilliant and evocative portraits of intellectual, artistic, and political life in the early twentieth century. Here we are witness to Herbst's childhood and young womanhood in the Midwest, her bohemian life in the East, and her extensive travels as a journalist. Along the way, she offers sketches of many of her contemporaries, including Allen Tate, Ernest Hemingway, Katherine Anne Porter, and John Dos Passos.
Similar Books
-
Notes From a Defeatist
by Joe Sacco
-
Quiet Days in Clichy / The World of Sex
by Henry Miller
-
Women Writers of Wwi
by Margaret R. Higonnet
-
Fiction from Tegel Prison
by Dietrich Bonhoeffer
-
-
Contemporary German Fiction: Hans Bender, Gerhard Köpf, Siegfried Lenz, and others
by A. Leslie Willson
-
The Dark and the Bright: Memoirs, 1911-1989
by Hilde Spiel
-
Prison Writing: A Collection of Fact, Fiction and Verse
by Julian Broadhead