The Enormous Room

(Author) (Introduction by)
Available

Product Details

Price
$16.95  $15.76
Publisher
New York Review of Books
Publish Date
Pages
288
Dimensions
4.9 X 7.9 X 0.7 inches | 0.66 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781681376196

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About the Author

E. E. Cummings (1894-1962) was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to prominent Unitarian parents whose circle of friends included Josiah Royce and William James. After earning his master's degree from Harvard in 1916, Cummings enlisted in the Norton-Harjes Ambulance Corps and was arrested by the French military on suspicion of espionage because of antiwar sentiments expressed in his letters home. Two months later, after his father wrote a letter to Woodrow Wilson, Cummings was set free and returned to the United States, where he was drafted into the army and served on a base in Massachusetts until the end of the war. The Enormous Room, based on his experience as a prisoner, appeared in 1922, a year before his first book of poetry, Tulips and Chimneys.

Nicholas Delbanco is the author of more than thirty books of fiction and nonfiction, including, most recently, Why Writing Matters, the essay collection Curiouser and Curiouser, and the novel It Is Enough. He is the Robert Frost Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of English Language and Literature at the University of Michigan. He lives in New York City and Cape Cod.

Reviews

"Cummings's memoir-cum-novel is valuable for its outlook, as the author, who would publish his first poetry collection a year later, uses his wry voice to counteract the cruelties of war." --Benjamin Shull, Los Angeles Review of Books

"The canonical works of the First World War are most frequently concerned with the squandered lives of young men, yet Cummings's report invaluably expands the reader's grasp of the catastrophe. . . . The Enormous Room was originally published before Cummings's debut collection of poems. . . and exhibits much of the fragmentary style and lively spirit for which his poetry would become known. Yet beneath these flourishes lies a sincere and biting critique of those responsible for the conflict, which rings as true now, in the book's centenary year, as it did then." --Kathleen Rooney, The TLS

"The Enormous Room is a good book, an unusual book, an exciting book." --Robert Graves

"I went through The Enormous Room again . . . and from it knew, more keenly than from my own senses, the tang of herded men, and their smell. The reading is as sharp as being in prison, for all but that crazed drumming against the door which comes of solitary confinement." --T. E. Lawrence

"The Enormous Room lives on, because those few who cause books to live have not been able to endure the thought of its mortality." --F. Scott Fitzgerald