Short Stories, Irish literature, Classics, Modern Fiction, Contemporary Literary Fiction, The Japanese Novel, Post Colonial Asian Fiction, The Legacy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and quality Historical Novels are Among my Interests








Wednesday, October 18, 2017

An Uncomon Reader: A Life of Edward Garnett by Helen Smith (forthcoming December, 2017)







Edward Garnett (1868 to 1837, London) was a highly regarded publisher, editor, critic who helped bring out the best in some of the highest regarded English language writers of the first half of the 20th century.  Among his clients were Joseph Conrad, D. H. Lawrence, John Galsworthy, Stephen Crane, Ford Madox Ford, Henry Green and T. E. Lawrence.  Garnett was much more than a literary editor to his clients, he was a friend and when needed a mentor.   He was very involved in the early career of Joseph Conrad, he well might have given up trying to write in English without the encouragement of Edward Garnett.  Smith devotes a lot of time to letting us get a strong feel for the business side of publishing.  Edward Garnett  had his own financial and personal struggles and Smith gives us a very sensitive account of his turbulent marriage to the famous translator of the Russians, Constance Garnett (1861 to 1946) and his relationship to his son David ( known in Bloomsbury Circles as “Bunny”,  the nickname derives from a childhood stuffed animal.) 

Both Edward and Constante had long term romances with others.  We get a look at how Constance began her translations, I admit I was surprised to learn of her affairs.  Her trips to Russia were fascinatingly treated.  There was a lot more drama in the lives of the Garnetts than I expected.

He helped several American writers become established in England.  Among them were Sarah Jewett, Robert Frost, and Sherwood Anderson.  He seemed to have greatly admired Stephen Crane and did his best to help him professionally and personally.  One of his most difficult clients was T. E. Lawrence, Edward Garnett  was overwhelmed with the power of his The Seven Pillars of Wisdom.

Smith brings  Edward Garnett, his clients, his affairs, his fatherhood, and his marriage vividly to life.  An Uncommon Reader: A Life of Edward Garnett by Helen Smith will be a pleasure to read for anyone interested in 20th century English literature, as an art and as a business.  I’m very glad I Read this book.  There is a lot more in it than I have mentioned.


Helen Smith is British writer and scholar. She earned her PhD in literature from the University of East Anglia, where she is a lecturer in modern literature and the director of the master's program in biography and creative nonfiction. She has won the Biographers' Club Prize and the RSL Jerwood Award for Non-Fiction, and lives in South Norfolk with her husband. The Uncommon Reader is her first book.

Mel u














7 comments:

Mudpuddle said...

i went through a Garnett period and enjoyed the work of all three mentioned Garnett's... in addition, Richard, Edward's father, was a curator at the British library most of his life: his book of short stories, "Twilight of the Gods" is quite good, i thought... Bunny's book about a fox/lady was good as well... there are still some Garnetts around, living in the south of France, i think... i will order and read this book... tx for the opportunity...

Mudpuddle said...

darn... it's out of my price range... i'll have to wait and see if the local library will get a copy... tx again for the post...

Mel u said...

The author of The bio talks about The father. Very interesting to here you have read The work of his son and his father. The book is expensive, I hope you can get a library copy. Thanks as aleays for your wonderful comments.

Suko said...

An Uncommon Reader: A Life of Edward Garnett by Helen Smith sounds like an excellent book. Thanks for this wonderful preview, Mel.

Mudpuddle said...

Mel: re your latest blog about "war on reading life": it won't come through to the US; don't know if it's censorship or what ...

Mel u said...

Mudpuddle, I took it down then put it back

http://rereadinglives.blogspot.com/2017/10/the-war-on-reading-life_21.html

Thanks

Buried In Print said...

That sounds like a very satisfying bookish read. I've read a couple of Constance Garnett's translations, but I didn't know she had a literary husband (and it sounds like her life was very full and interesting beyond him anyway)!