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Lost Classics


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The editors of Canada's Brick magazine--Michael Ondaatje, Michael Redhill, Esta Spalding, and Linda Spalding--have assembled this collection of 74 writers celebrating little-known works of literature. Anne Carson shares her love of HANDBOOK FOR WILLIAM, composed in the 840s, and Margaret Atwood reflects on the rare early-20th-century novel DOCTOR GLAS.


Available editions of Lost Classics

9780676972993 9780676972993, Book, A.A. Knopf Canada, 2000

$2.85 (Good)

Other copies of 9780676972993
   
9780385720861 9780385720861, Paperback, Alfred a Knopf Inc, 2001

$1.00 (Good )

Other copies of 9780385720861
   

Publisher Notes

An Anchor Books Original

Seventy-four distinguished writers tell personal tales of books loved and lost–great books overlooked, under-read, out of print, stolen, scorned, extinct, or otherwise out of commission.

Compiled by the editors of Brick: A Literary Magazine, Lost Classics is a reader’s delight: an intriguing and entertaining collection of eulogies for lost books. As the editors have written in a joint introduction to the book, “being lovers of books, we’ve pulled a scent of these absences behind us our whole reading lives, telling people about books that exist only on our own shelves, or even just in our own memory.” Anyone who has ever been changed by a book will find kindred spirits in the pages of Lost Classics.

Each of the editors has contributed a lost book essay to this collection, including Michael Ondaatje on Sri Lankan filmmaker Tissa Abeysekara’s Bringing Tony Home, a novella about a mutual era of childhood. Also included are Margaret Atwood on sex and death in the scandalous Doctor Glas, first published in Sweden in 1905; Russell Banks on the off-beat travelogue Too Late to Turn Back by Barbara Greene–the “slightly ditzy” cousin of Graham; Bill Richardson on a children’s book for adults by Russell Hoban; Ronald Wright on William Golding’s Pincher Martin; Caryl Phillips on Michael Mac Liammoir’s account of his experiences on the set of Orson Welles’s Othello, and much, much more.

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