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James Purdy (1923 - )

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Open City: The only woman he ever left, James Purdy (Contributor)

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Gertrude of Stony Island Avenue : A NovelGertrude of Stony Island Avenue : A Novel by James Purdy

In 1956, James Purdy published Don't Call Me By My Right Name and Other Stories, and in the years since, he has produced some of the most remarkable stories, novels, and plays in the English language. Praised by artists as diverse as Dame Edith Sitwell, Gore Vidal, and John Waters for his evocative diction, emotional subtlety, and disturbingly baroque narratives, Purdy has created an emotional, psychological landscape uniquely American in its depiction of fear, love, loss, and violence. In Gertrude of Stony Island Avenue--his 14th novel and 46th book--he charts the life of Carrie Kinsella, a stifled, repressed woman who suddenly realizes the emptiness of her own life after the death of her daughter Gertrude, a brilliant artist. In her search for the "real" Gertrude, Carrie realizes that it is actually herself she is attempting to find. As in his classics Eustace Chisolm and the Works and In a Shallow Grave, Purdy's understanding of the horrors of the human heart--and the slim but possible potential for salvation--shines through here in ways that are devastating and sublime. Gertrude of Stony Island Avenue is James Purdy at his best, which is to say magnificent. --Michael Bronski (Amazon.com)

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Narrow Rooms (Gay Modern Classics Series) Narrow Rooms (Gay Modern Classics Series) by James Purdy

Released from a prison sentence for manslaughter, Sidney returns home to West Virginia, where, to exorcise the memory of the lover he killed, he must keep his appointment with destiny in the shape of the man known as "the Renderer".
A cult book that Derek Jarman planned to film, this "dark and splendid affair by an authentic American genius" (Gore Vidal) is a shattering novel of sexual passion in the remote Appalachians, and a journey into the dark night of the American soul.

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James Purdy Papers Archive

Copyright © 1990 by the Yale University Library.

The James Purdy Papers were the gift of James Purdy between 1962 and 1973, with the exceptions of Purdy's letters to John Cowper Powys, which are the 1964 gift of Phyllis Playter, and the autographed score of Robert Helps's "The Running Sun," which is the 1972 gift of the composer.

   

James Purdy Manuscripts

University of Delaware Library, Special Collections

The James Purdy Manuscript Collection spans the years 1961 to 1978 and contains three items: a short story, Everything Under the Sun; and two novels, I am Elijah Thrush, and Narrow Rooms.

Originally published in Partisan Review, Everything Under the Sun was included in Purdy's 1961 collection Children is All (New Directions). This ten page carbon typescript includes several minor corrections by the author.

Purdy began writing Narrow Rooms in 1975 in Brooklyn and finished the novel two years later while staying in Berkeley. His inscription on the title page indicates that it was based upon a true story. The 234-page typescript is the printer's final copy and includes only minor corrections by the author.

The typescript of I am Elijah Thrush is perhaps most interesting from a scholarly standpoint because it contains extensive corrections and additions by the author. Pages eight through ten were almost entirely reworked, and Purdy inserted an additional page of material which he labeled "48a" for the printer. I am Elijah Thrush was first published by Doubleday in 1972.

  

James Purdy Biography

University of Delaware Library, Special Collections

Excerpt:

From the outset of his writing career, Purdy has had difficulty attracting the attention of both publishers and critics. His first several short stories were rejected by every magazine to which he sent them, and he was forced to sign with a private publisher for his first two books, 63: Dream Palace and Don't Call Me by My Right Name and Other Stories, both published in 1956. Hoping to increase his readership, Purdy sent copies of these first two books to writers he admired, including English poet Dame Edith Sitwell. Sitwell raved about Purdy's work and helped convince an English publisher, Gollancz, to publish and distribute Purdy's books in England. Purdy's writing was introduced in the United States a year later when his previous books were published together in one volume, Color of Darkness: Eleven Stories and a Novella (1957)...

  

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B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
| Authors Index | Scholars Index |

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