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Books by James Agee

Born: 11/29/1909; Died: 05/16/1955

James Agee Biography & Notes


James Agee (November 27, 1909 - May 16, 1955) was a United States novelist, screenwriter, journalist, poet, and film critic. In the 1930s and 1940s, he was one of the most influential film critics in the U.S. His autobiographical novel, A Death in the Family (1957), won the Pulitzer Prize.

Agee was born at 15th and Highland Streets in Knoxville, Tennessee. He lost his father at the age of six in an automobile accident. Much of his early education was at a boarding school for boys. He attended Saint Andrew's School for Mountain Boys, now Saint Andrews-Sewanee School, Phillips Exeter Academy, where he edited the Monthly and Harvard University, where he was president of the Harvard Advocate.

After graduation, he wrote for Fortune and Time magazines. In 1934, he published his first volume of poetry, Permit Me Voyage, with a foreword by Archibald MacLeish. In the summer of 1936, he spent eight weeks with the photographer Walker Evans living among sharecroppers in Alabama. Although Fortune never published his article, the material became a book in 1941, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men.

In 1951, Agee suffered the first in a series of heart attacks, which ultimately claimed his life four years later, at the age of 45. His considerable if erratic carreer as a movie script writer was by then curtailed by alcoholism, and his contribution to "The Night of the Hunter" (1955) remains unclear.



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Agee on Film by James Agee ( 1983)
Agee on Film by James Agee ( 1983)
Brooklyn Is Brooklyn Is Southeast of the Island Travel Notes by James Agee ( 2005)
Originally written in 1939 by the author for a special issue of Fortune but rejected by the magazine, an evocative study of the borough of Brooklyn paints a literary portrait of its diverse neighborhoods and the people who live there.
Collected Poems of James Agee by James Agee ( 1969)
The Collected Short Prose of James Agee by James Agee ( 1978)
Death in the Family Death in the Family by James Agee ( 1999)
The tragedy of Jay Follet's sudden death destroys his family's secure and loving world.
A Death in the Family A Death in the Family A Restoration of the Author's Text by James Agee ( 2007)
Jay Follet, the father of a family in Knoxville, goes to visit his ailing father, who has suffered a heart attack. On his return trip, he is killed in an auto accident. The remainder of the novel examines the reaction of his wife, his 4-year-old daughter, and especially his 6-year-old son as they prepare for a final farewell. This book was published posthumously in 1957, from Agee's unfinished manuscript.
A Death in the Family A Death in the Family by James Agee ( 2009)
A Death in the Family A Death in the Family by James Agee ( 2008)
Jay Follet, the father of a family in Knoxville, goes to visit his ailing father, who has suffered a heart attack. On his return trip, he is killed in an auto accident. The remainder of the novel examines the reaction of his wife, his 4-year-old daughter, and especially his 6-year-old son as they prepare for a final farewell. This book was published posthumously in 1957, from Agee's unfinished manuscript.
Escritos Sobre Cine by James Agee ( 2001)
James Agee A Portrait by James Agee ( 1971)
Seventeen pieces of Agee's work, heretofore uncollected.
James Agee James Agee Selected Poems by James Agee ( 2008)
A volume of poetic works by the writer best known for his journalism, screenplays, and novels offers insight into his use of restless language and diverse forms, in a collection that features pieces ranging from religious sonnets and lyrics to works of musical comedy.
James Agee Rediscovered James Agee Rediscovered The Journals of Let Us Now Praise Famous Men and Other New Manuscripts by James Agee, Hugh Davis ( 2005)
Knoxville Summer 1915/Ltd Edition by James Agee ( 1986)
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men Let Us Now Praise Famous Men Three Tenant Families by James Agee ( 2005)
Three key works by the early twentieth-century author include the "prophetic journalism" experiment of Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, the Pulitzer Prize-winning A Death in the Family, and the novella The Morning Watch.
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men by James Agee, Evans Walker ( 1974)
An illustrated portrayal of three Alabama sharecropper families in 1936, examining their everyday existence in poverty.
Letters of James Agee to Father Flye by James Agee ( 1978)
Letters to Barbara by Glenn Meeter, James Agee, Barbara Meter ( 1995)
A father's moving, beautifully illustrated letters to his young daughter during World War II.
Making America by James Agee, Carol Berkin ( 1999)
Many Are Called Many Are Called by Walker Evans, Jeff L. (AFT) Rosenheim ( 2004)
Walker Evans immortalized the New York City subway and its riders in this collection of photographs taken with a hidden camera between 1938 and 1941. Catching passengers unaware, Evans was able to document a variety of types and faces: haughty matrons, sad-eyed dreamers, blankly staring laborers, oblivious newspaper readers, lovely young girls, and one blind accordionist. These beautifully textured black-and-white photos, edited down to 89 from more than 600, provide a lovingly accurate group portrait of the city and its people. The book also contains an introductory essay by Luc Sante that examines the concept of voyeurism, and an afterword by Metropolitan Museum curator Jeff Rosenheim explaining the history of Evans's remarkable project.
Morning Watch by James Agee ( 1984)
Permit Me Voyage by James Agee ( 1971)
Steward's Fork Steward's Fork A Sustainable Future for the Klamath Mountains by James Agee ( 2007)
A Way of Seeing by James Agee, Helen Levitt ( 1981)
Una muerte en la familia/ A Death in the Family by James Agee ( 2007)
Una muerte en la familia/ A death in the family by James Agee ( 2008)

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