Maestros & Monsters: Days & Nights with Susan Sontag & George Steiner
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Become an affiliateSUSAN SONTAG, born in 1933, was the best-known public intellectual in the United States for about forty years, roughly from the appearance of her famous essay Notes on Camp in 1965 until the time of her death in 2004.Though she made feature films and wrote a good deal of fiction--she won the National Book Award for her novel In America in 2002--she was principally read and admired as an essayist, critic and polemicist. She was also widely admired as a human rights activist who wrote about her experiences in war zones in Sarajevo, the Middle East and Vietnam. Her many books include Illness as Metaphor, On Photography, Against Interpretation, Styles of Radical Will, Under the Sign of Saturn and At the Same Time. A biography of Sontag by Benjamin Moser won the Pulitzer Prize in 2020.
GEORGE STEINER, born in 1929, was a European intellectual and man of letters who attracted an enormous following in the United States, initially based upon the publication of early books like The Death of Tragedy, Tolstoy or Dostoyevski and Language & Silence. But his influence also had much to do with his role as a regular book critic for The New Yorker Magazine and with the periodical writing he did for the leading newspapers and magazines. Many readers regarded him as the most learned thinker of his generation, and also as the most thrilling lecturer they had ever seen, His major books include After Babel, Antigones, Extraterritorial, Real Presences and a controversial "Holocaust novel" entitled The Portage to San Cristobal of AH. He died in 2020.This superb book takes us back to the last moments of the golden age of American letters. --Cornel West
Robert Boyers has been in close contact with every seismic shift in literary, intellectual, artistic, and academic quarters.--Joyce Carol Oates
A moving contribution to the history of our intellectual culture.--Darryl Pinckney
A thrillingly generous book ... in the grand tradition of Samuel Johnson's "Lives of the Poets," Sainte-Beuve's biographical sketches, and Turgenev's "Literary Reminiscences."--Philip Lopate