Imatge de l'autor

Louis D. Rubin, Jr. (1923–2013)

Autor/a de A Writer's Companion

51+ obres 693 Membres 7 Ressenyes

Sobre l'autor

Louis Decimus Rubin, Jr. was born in Charleston, South Carolina on November 19, 1923. After serving in the Army during World War II, he received a history degree the University of Richmond. He worked for The Associated Press and several newspapers including the Richmond News-Leader before receiving mostra'n més master's and doctoral degrees from Johns Hopkins University. In 1953, while still at Johns Hopkins University, he co-edited his first book, Southern Renascence: The Literature of the Modern South. He taught at the University of Pennsylvania, Hollins College, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He was a co-founder of Algonquin Books and founder of the Fellowship of Southern Writers. In 1989, he retired from the UNC faculty after 22 years to focus on Algonquin Books. He was a prolific author who wrote novels, critical studies, histories, memoirs and a guide for predicting the weather. His books include Small Craft Advisory, Babe Ruth's Ghost, A Memory of Trains, An Honorable Estate, and My Father's People. He died from kidney disease on November 16, 2013 at the age of 89. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra'n menys
Crèdit de la imatge: Raleigh News & Observer

Obres de Louis D. Rubin, Jr.

A Writer's Companion (1995) — Editor — 110 exemplars
The History of Southern Literature (1985) — Editor — 66 exemplars
The Quotable Baseball Fanatic (2000) — Editor — 30 exemplars
The Literary South: Louisiana (1979) 29 exemplars
The Heat of the Sun: A Novel (1995) 20 exemplars
A Gallery of Southerners (1982) 16 exemplars
My Father's People: A Family of Southern Jews (2002) — Autor — 16 exemplars
Southern writing, 1585-1920 (1970) — Editor — 14 exemplars
The comic imagination in American literature (1973) — Editor — 10 exemplars
The Golden Weather (Voices of the South) (1961) — Autor — 8 exemplars
Black Poetry in America (1974) 5 exemplars
Surfaces of a Diamond (1981) 4 exemplars
No Place on Earth (1959) 4 exemplars
The idea of an American novel (1961) — Editor — 4 exemplars
The Teller in the Tale (1967) 3 exemplars
Virginia a History 1 exemplars

Obres associades

Jurgen: A Comedy of Justice (1919) — Epíleg, algunes edicions1,014 exemplars
The Top Ten: Writers Pick Their Favorite Books (1997) — Col·laborador — 304 exemplars
The Best American Short Stories 1981 (1981) — Col·laborador — 35 exemplars
A Richmond Reader, 1733-1983 (1983) — Introducció, algunes edicions26 exemplars
The Best American Short Stories 1979 (1979) — Col·laborador — 25 exemplars
James Branch Cabell: Centennial Essays (1983) — Col·laborador — 22 exemplars
Mannerhouse (1948) — Editor, algunes edicions13 exemplars
A Portrait of Southern Writers: Photographs (2000) — Col·laborador — 13 exemplars
Faulkner and Ideology (Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Series) (1995) — Col·laborador — 12 exemplars
Literary Charleston: A Lowcountry Reader (1996) — Pròleg — 7 exemplars
Place in American Fiction: Excursions and Explorations (2005) — Col·laborador — 3 exemplars
Papers on Proust (1966) — Introducció — 1 exemplars
Kalki : Studies in James Branch Cabell — Col·laborador, algunes edicions1 exemplars

Etiquetat

Coneixement comú

Nom oficial
Rubin, Louis Decimus, Jr.
Data de naixement
1923-11-19
Data de defunció
2013-11-16
Gènere
male
Nacionalitat
USA
Lloc de naixement
Charleston, South Carolina, USA
Lloc de defunció
Pittsboro, North Carolina, USA
Educació
Johns Hopkins University (PhD|1954)
Johns Hopkins University (MA|1949)
University of Richmond (BA|1946)
Yale University (1943-44)
College of Charleston (1940-42)
Professions
editor
literary critic
publisher
professor
historian
novelist (mostra-les totes 8)
journalist
essayist
Relacions
Barth, John (student)
Dillard, Annie (student)
Smith, Lee (student)
Gibbons, Kaye (student)
McCorkle, Jill (student)
Ravenel, Shannon (student) (mostra-les totes 7)
Woodward, C. Vann (teacher)
Organitzacions
Fellowship of Southern Writers (charter member)
The Hopkins Review (editor)
American Studies Association (executive secretary)
Hollins University (professor)
Hollins Critic (founder and editor)
Southern Literary Journal (co-founder) (mostra-les totes 13)
Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill (founder, president, and editorial director)
Johns Hopkins University (instructor)
University of North Carolina (professor)
Louisiana State University Press (editor)
University of North Carolina Press (advisory editor)
Mississippi Quarterly (editorial board)
U.S. Information Agency Forums (co-ordinator)
Premis i honors
Cleanth Brooks Medal for Lifetime Achievement (1997)
Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award, National Book Critics Circle
North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame (1997)
Sewanee Review fellowship (1953)
Guggenheim fellowship (1956)
American Council of Learned Societies fellowship (1964) (mostra-les totes 18)
Distinguished Virginian Award (1972)
Litt.D., University of Richmond (1974)
Mayflower Society award (1978)
Jules F. Landry Award, Louisiana State University Press (1978)
D.Litt., Clemson University (1986)
D.Litt., University of the South (1992)
D.Litt., College of Charleston (1989)
D.Litt., University of North Carolina at Asheville (1993)
R. Hunt Parker Memorial Award for lifetime contributions to the literary heritage of North Carolina
South Carolina Academy of Authors (1987)
North Carolina Award (1992)
O. Max Gardner Medal (1989)

Membres

Ressenyes

Reread in light of so much that has been written and portrayed about the press, especially since the Trump era began. I treated it as a rest stop from more serious and denser reading; what I came away with, however, was some personal thoughts about my first job, then others’ first jobs and reminiscences … such as Twain in “Old Times on the Mississippi.”
 
Marcat
markburris | Jul 11, 2021 |
The most commendable facet of this collection is its diversity of perspective. There are analytical essays by scholars, tender meditations by fiction writers, and more formal critiques by literary critics. The result is a rather fair and balanced portrait of Wolfe's work.
 
Marcat
BeauxArts79 | May 30, 2021 |
A rather loosely connected group of essays, mostly originating as reviews of books about World War I, but opening with "A Certain Day in 1939" which described growing up as a Reformed Jewish boy in Charleston, SC between the two world wars, automatically accepting the southern military tradition even though his own ancestry had nothing to do w8th the Civil War. It is one of the best descriptions of how being "southern" and accepting the sentimental Confederate historical tradition could be something quite different from the racism with which it is usually identified. The other essays tend to express the view that World War I Germans were just "Nazis with better manners" and that World War I battles were all mindless slaughters, both of which I find a bit simplistic but probably natural for someone who grew up in his conditions as an American Jew who served (however ineptly, by his frank account) in World War 2. He does come across as a profoundly humane civilized human being.… (més)
½
1 vota
Marcat
antiquary | Oct 1, 2015 |

Llistes

Premis

Potser també t'agrada

Autors associats

Estadístiques

Obres
51
També de
16
Membres
693
Popularitat
#36,521
Valoració
3.8
Ressenyes
7
ISBN
71
Llengües
1

Gràfics i taules