Love Unknown: The Life and Worlds of Elizabeth Bishop

Backorder (temporarily out of stock)
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$32.00  $29.76
Publisher
Viking
Publish Date
Pages
432
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 1.4 inches | 1.4 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780525428817

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Thomas Travisano is the founding president of the Elizabeth Bishop Society and the author of Elizabeth Bishop: Her Artistic Development and Midcentury Quartet: Bishop, Lowell, Jarrell, Berryman. He is principal editor of the acclaimed Words in Air: The Complete Correspondence Between Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell and served as co-editor of Elizabeth Bishop in the 21st Century and the three-volume New Anthology of American Poetry. Travisano's work on Love Unknown was supported by a Guggenheim Fellowship and awards from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the American Philosophical Society. He is Emeritus Professor of English at Hartwick College.
Reviews
"The accounts [in Love Unknown] are parsed with particular insight by Travisano, a Bishop specialist, who assiduously traces the influence of the life on the work." --The New Yorker

"Reading [Love Unknown] is almost as enjoyable as reading one of Bishop's strange and marvelous poems." --The Washington Post

"A definitive biography-cum-literary study of Elizabeth Bishop... Travisano's essential volume illuminates Bishop's life and, most valuably, her work." --Publishers Weekly (starred)

"Utterly captivating... illuminating, interwoven analysis of [Elizabeth Bishop's] work." --Booklist (starred)

"A masterly biography." --Library Journal (starred)

"An authoritative and sensitive biography... A finely textured portrait of an acclaimed poet." --Kirkus

"This is the biography we've been waiting for. Alternately heartbreaking and joyous, it contains many fascinating discoveries, all orchestrated by an insightful, sympathetic narrator." --Steven Axelrod, President of the Robert Lowell Society and author of Robert Lowell: Life and Art

"Thomas Travisano's new critical biography, Love Unknown, is as illuminating as it is engrossing--a major addition to our ever-deepening understanding of Bishop's life and singular art." --Lloyd Schwartz, poet, Pulitzer Prize-winning critic, and co-editor of Elizabeth Bishop: Poems, Prose, and Letters

"You are confident, reading Travisano's Love Unknown, that his biography comes as close to communicating an understanding and appreciation of the elusive and complicated Bishop as can be achieved." --Scott Donaldson, author of Hemingway vs. Fitzgerald and The Paris Husband

"Elizabeth Bishop's great poetry has been considered an art of loss, as in her celebrated ironic line, 'the art of losing isn't hard to master.' In Thomas Travisano's new, wide-ranging biography, she emerges instead as a poet of gain upon gain, maker of an art grown from all she had lost in childhood. He gives us a writer alive to adventure, ever seeking, discovering, and burning with the fire to transmute ordinary things she encounters into gold." --Grace Schulman, winner of the Frost Medal of Distinguished Lifetime Achievement in American Poetry

"Thomas Travisano has deftly orchestrated an immense amount of research and years of meditation on the life of this great poet. The result is a biography that is full of revelations, indispensable readings of the poems, no candle unlit in illuminating Bishop's writing life from childhood to her last year. This is an utterly captivating book." --Howard Norman, author of The Ghost Clause

"Thomas Travisano displays a particular mastery of the contexts of Elizabeth Bishop's life and art. He offers much new and precisely evaluated insight into Bishop's family, friends and communities. Travisano ends his biography in a truly Bishop-like fashion--with a funny and incisive story, a story that shows how well he appreciates and can emulate Bishop's singular and deceptive casualness of tone."
--Lorrie Goldensohn, author of Elizabeth Bishop: The Biography of a Poetry