This section contains 3,496 words (approx. 12 pages at 300 words per page) |
Dictionary of Literary Biography on Caroline Blackwood
Caroline Blackwood's writing career, which occupied little more than a dozen years, produced noteworthy contributions in several genres. Her books include two collections of stories and journalistic pieces, four novels, a biographical study, and a cookbook. Her novels won almost unanimous praise from the critics, along with some wry expressions of discomfiture. Her first book, For All That I Found There (1973), provoked a chorus of shudders at her pessimism and misanthropy. The review in TLS: The Times Literary Supplement was headed Hopeless Cases and asserted: reading them consecutively one can only repeat, how near the precipice this time" Francis King in the Sunday Telegraph characterized the constant theme of the stories as destructiveness. Gabriele Annan in the Listener described it as the unbearable, remarking that she does not seem to like human beings at all. Reviewing Blackwood's latest novel in the light of her whole career, Peter Kemp...
This section contains 3,496 words (approx. 12 pages at 300 words per page) |