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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Edmund Wilson published by this site and its partners.

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Displaying items 1-12 of 27
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    Apr 30, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. 'End of the Rainbow': magic, heartbreak in Judy Garland portrayal

    NEW YORK — Judy Garland, often drunk and occasionally disheveled, in Peter Quilter's biographical drama "End of the Rainbow," is rummaging for booze in her suite at the Ritz hotel. She's wired, and not simply because of the pills she can't seem to wean herself off of.
    NEW YORK — Judy Garland, often drunk and occasionally disheveled, in Peter Quilter's biographical drama "End of the Rainbow," is rummaging for booze in her suite at the Ritz hotel. She's wired, and not simply because of the pills she can't seem to...

    Tags: Health, Biography (genre), Entertainment Events, Broadway Theater, Neil Patrick Harris

  2. Nov 1, 2010 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  3. In a word: Rebarbative

    Each week, The Sun's John McIntyre presents a moderately obscure but evocative word with which you may not be familiar -- another brick to add to the wall of your working vocabulary. Use it in a sentence in a comment on his blog, You Don't Say, and the...

    Tags: New York, Vladimir Nabokov

  4. Dec 26, 2010 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. Book review: 'Letters,' Saul Bellow, edited by Benjamin Taylor

    Letters
    Special to the Los Angeles Times
    Letters Saul Bellow, edited by Benjamin Taylor Viking: 608 pp, $35 Saul Bellow, being Saul Bellow, coined literary profit from emotional tumult. From personal pain came self-exploration and impish bons mots, poured into the heightened confessional of...

    Tags: Nobel Prize Awards, Martin Amis, Cynthia Ozick, Philip Roth, Alfred Kazin

  6. Sep 15, 2010 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Joaquin Phoenix: film at Charles two days after 'Letterman'

    Joaquin Phoenix makes a return appearance to "Late Show with David Letterman" on Wednesday, September 22, and two days later hits the Charles in the controversial documentary "I'm Still Here," which chronicles his attempt to switch from acting to rap. In addition, just to remind audiences what the fuss is about, "Late Show" will replay, this Thursday, his notoriously cryptic February 11, 2009 appearance, which first set viewers wondering whether he was abysmally burned-out on acting or staging an intricate hoax.
    Baltimore Sun reporter
    Joaquin Phoenix makes a return appearance to "Late Show with David Letterman" on Wednesday, September 22, and two days later hits the Charles in the controversial documentary "I'm Still Here," which chronicles his attempt to switch from acting to rap....

    Tags: Health, Injuries and Wounds, Geoffrey Rush, Music, Marquis de Sade

  8. Sep 30, 2009 | Los Angeles Times
  9. Tight, blotto, sotted, sloshed: in other words, DRUNK [Updated]

    Jacket Copy
    Out this week, just in time for Octoberfest, is "Drunk: the Definitive Drinkers Dictionary." A sleek, gray hardcover of manageable size, the book contains no less than 2,964 synonyms for drunk. "The English language includes more synonyms for the word.......
  10. Sep 30, 2009 | Los Angeles Times
  11. 2,964 ways to say 'drunk'

    Brand X
    Ever gone out and felt, well, not casters-up, not entirely not nearly blotto, but some kind of subtle gradation of drunk? Perhaps you'd find exactly the right turn of phrase in the new book 'Drunk: the Definitive Drinkers Dictionary,' out this week -- it'...
  12. Dec 3, 2009 | Los Angeles Times
  13. Matt Weinstock, Dec. 3, 1959

    The Daily Mirror
    Book Banning In 1946 two Los Angeles booksellers were arrested for selling copies of Edmund Wilson's "Memoirs of Hecate County," which had been banned. The book was ruled obscene and they were convicted. Now, 13 years later, a new edition of "Hecate"...
  14. Dec 22, 2009 | Los Angeles Times
  15. Forgotten treasures of the last century, from 25 writers

    Jacket Copy
    In 1999, the L.A. Times asked dozens of writers to look back at the prior century and share books they considered lost treasures -- books they loved that had slipped out of sight. Although the authors were formidable -- including......
  16. Oct 4, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. A word or two thousand on 'Drunk: The Definitive Drinkers Dictionary'

    Out this week, just in time for Octoberfest, is "Drunk: The Definitive Drinkers Dictionary." The book contains no fewer than 2,964 synonyms for "drunk." "The English language includes more synonyms for the word 'drunk' than for any other word," writes...

    Tags: Margaret Mitchell, Arizona, Stephen King, Carl Hiaasen, England

  18. Sep 8, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. Richard Poirier dies at 83; literary critic helped found Library of America

    Richard Poirier, a literary critic and writer who was one of the founders of the Library of America, a monumental effort to keep American literary classics in print and accessible to the reading public, died Aug. 15 at Roosevelt Hospital in New York. He was 83.
    Richard Poirier, a literary critic and writer who was one of the founders of the Library of America, a monumental effort to keep American literary classics in print and accessible to the reading public, died Aug. 15 at Roosevelt Hospital in New York. He...

    Tags: Health, Vietnam War (1955-1975), Mark Twain, Philip Roth, Roosevelt

  20. Feb 2, 2008 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. The ultimate self-doubter

    Alfred Kazin By Richard M. Cook Yale University Press, 452 pages, $35 'I love to think about America," Alfred Kazin, 26, recorded in his journal in February 1942. He was finishing his canonical study of modern American literature, "On Native Grounds,"...

    Tags: Health, Crosswords, Brownsville, Emily Dickinson, The New York Times

  22. Mar 23, 2008 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. The Gen X poster boy's endless ennui

    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    In his 1985 breakout novel, "Less Than Zero," Bret Easton Ellis, then all of 21 years old, created young, jaded Angelenos who just didn't care about anything: They recounted cocaine scores and semi-anonymous sex in the same tone with which they lamented...

    Tags: San Francisco, Hollywood (Los Angeles, California), Easton (Easton, Pennsylvania), Culture, The New York Times

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