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There was a time I would rather have endured minor surgery than read a 400-page biography of D.H. Lawrence, whose misogyny is canon. “The one vile man I have ever known,” wrote Virginia Woolf.
Frances Wilson’s “Burning Man: The Trials of D. H. Lawrence” is a remarkable and idiosyncratic work of biographical criticism, in part because of how intentionally shaped it is. Lawrence’s ...
Inflamed, impertinent and deeply insightful, D.H. Lawrence’s “Studies in Classic American Literature” remains startlingly relevant 100 years after it was originally published.
B ut when I wrote a fictionalized account of D.H. and Frieda Lawrence’s marriage, The Novelist’s Wife (The Modernist Press, 2015, under the pen name Sasha Bristol), D.H. Lawrence’s mercurial ...
To D. H. Lawrence’s contemporaries, he was known as a pornographer who’d wasted his talents—or even, as Bertrand Russell had it, a protofascist. After his death, he enjoyed a brief surge of ...
D.H. Lawrence’s “Sketches of Etruscan Places and Other Essays” imagines a long-ago vitality of life amid the remnants of Etruscan civilization in Italian towns such as Cerveteri, home to the ...
Why D.H. Lawrence, Misogynist Male Author, Has Lots of Female Fans. His obsession with manly power is both off-putting and fascinating. By Noah Berlatsky. May 8, 2013. Share. Save. Penguin Classics.
If the reputation of D. H. Lawrence were to be measured like a heartbeat on an EKG, the graph would show a sharp rise after his death, in 1930, followed by a headlong fall, in 1970, and then fifty ...
OUT OF SHEER RAGE: Wrestling with D.H. Lawrence By Geoff Dyer North Point Press, 242 pages, $23 For most of its length, “Out of Sheer Rage” is a book about how Geoff Dyer cannot bring himself ...