Fr. 12.50

Four Great American Classics

English · Paperback

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Informationen zum Autor Herman Melville was born in New York City in 1819. When his father died, he was forced to leave school and find work. After passing through some minor clerical jobs, the eighteen-year-old young man shipped out to sea, first on a short cargo trip, then, at twenty-one, on a three-year South Sea whaling venture. From the experiences accumulated on this voyage would come the material for his early books,  Typee  (1846) and  Omoo  (1847), as well as for such masterpieces as  Moby-Dick   (1851),  Pierre  (1852),  The Piazza Tales  (1856), and  Billy Budd, Sailor , and Other Stories  (posthumous, 1924). Though the first two novels—popular romantic adventures—sold well, Melville's more serious writing failed to attract a large audience, perhaps because it attacked the current philosophy of transcendentalism and its espoused "self-reliance." (As he made clear in the savagely comic  The Confidence Man  (1857), Melville thought very little of Emersonian philosophy.) He spent his later years working as a customs inspector on the New York docks, writing only poems comprising  Battle-Pieces  (1866). He died in 1891, leaving  Billy Budd, Sailor, and Other Stories  unpublished. Mark Twain , considered one of the greatest writers in American literature, was born Samuel Clemens in Florida, Missouri, in 1835, and died in Redding, Connecticut in 1910. As a young child, he moved with his family to Hannibal, Missouri, on the banks of the Mississippi River, a setting that inspired his two best-known novels,  The Adventures of Tom Sawyer  and  Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.  In his person and in his pursuits, he was a man of extraordinary contrasts. Although he left school at 12 when his father died, he was eventually awarded honorary degrees from Yale University, the University of Missouri, and Oxford University. His career encompassed such varied occupations as printer, Mississippi riverboat pilot, journalist, travel writer, and publisher. He made fortunes from his writing but toward the end of his life he had to resort to lecture tours to pay his debts. He was hot-tempered, profane, and sentimental—and also pessimistic, cynical, and tortured by self-doubt. His nostalgia for the past helped produce some of his best books. He lives in American letters as a great artist, described by writer William Dean Howells as “the Lincoln of our literature.” Twain and his wife, Olivia Langdon Clemens, had four children—a son, Langdon, who died as an infant, and three daughters, Susy, Clara, and Jean. Stephen Crane  was born in 1871, in Newark, New Jersey. He attempted college twice, the second time failing a theme-writing course while writing articles for newspapers such as the  New York Tribune.  In 1892 Crane moved to the poverty of New York City’s Lower East Side—the Bowery so vividly depicted in  Maggie: A Girl of the Streets . In 1894 the serial publication began of  The Red Badge of Courage , his acclaimed and widely popular novel of a young soldier’s coming of age in the Civil War. He died in Germany at the age of twenty-eight,   in June of 1900. Klappentext These four landmark novels of nineteenth-century American literature have gained a permanent place in our culture as great classics. They are not only part of our national heritage, but masterpieces of world literature whose deep and lasting influence is felt to this day. The Scarlet Letter vividly records America's moral and historical roots in Puritan New England and masterfully re-creates a society's preoccupation with sin, guilt, and pride. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn carries readers along on Huck's unforgettable journey down the Mississippi in America's foremost comic epic—the first great novel in a truly American voice. The Red Badge of Courage re-creates the brutal reality of war and its psychological ...

Product details

Authors Stephen Crane, Herman Melville, Mark Twain
Assisted by Bantam Doubleday Dell (Editor)
Publisher Bantam Books USA
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback
Released 01.12.1992
 
EAN 9780553213621
ISBN 978-0-553-21362-1
No. of pages 896
Dimensions 106 mm x 174 mm x 36 mm
Series Bantam classic
Bantam Classic
Subject Fiction > Narrative literature

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