Mortification: Writers' Stories of Their Public Shame
Humiliation is not, of course, unique to writers. However, the world of letters does seem to offer a near-perfect micro-climate for embarrassment and shame. There is something about the conjunction of high-mindedness and low income that is inherently comic; something about the very idea of deeply private thoughts -- carefully worked and honed into art over the years -- being presented to a public audience of dubious strangers, that strays perilously close to tragedy. These seventy contributions prove it is possible to reverse Auden's dictum: that art is born out of humiliation.
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"Entertaining reading. This is a jolly romp and will make a good stocking-filler for any authors of your acquaintance." -- Sunday Times (London)
"As simple as Schott's Original Miscellany and equally effective." -- Literary Review
"Full of the most achingly funny, endearing accounts of total humiliation." -- Daily Mail (London)