| Details | | Publication Date: | 1998-09-01 |
| Size | | Length: | 356 pages | | Height: | 9.5 in | | Width: | 6.3 in | | Thickness: | 1.2 in | | Weight: | 28.8 oz |
Publisher's Note A brilliant author and satirist famous for his sardonic wit, Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914?) remains one of the most colorful figures in American letters. He fought in the Civil War, worked as a journalist in both the United States and England, and produced such enduring works as The Devil's Dictionary and the classic short story "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge". In 1913, he disappeared into war-torn Mexico and is believed to have died there. This book brings together, for the first time in one volume, all of Bierce's autobiographical writings; much of this material has never been reprinted since its original appearance in newspapers. The editors have organized these writings into a comprehensive account of Bierce's long life. The core of the book is "Bits of Autobiography", a series of eleven essays Bierce wrote about his Civil War experiences (in which he saw action at key battles such as Shiloh and Chickamauga), his adventures as a Treasury Department aide in the Reconstruction-era South, and his three years as a Grub Street hack in London. In combing through Bierce's voluminous journalism and letters, the editors uncovered many other autobiographical passages, which they have included here. These writings describe Bierce's slow rise to celebrity as a journalist in San Francisco and as a writer of tales of the Civil War and of the supernatural, his celebrated battle with the railroad baron Collis R. Huntington in 1896, and his stormy relationship with William Randolph Hearst during his long tenure with the San Francisco Examiner.
Industry Reviews Best remembered today for his masterpiece of irony, The Devil's Dictionary, the versatile Bierce was a war correspondent, a political essayist, author of three volumes of popular satirical verse and, at times, a brilliant craftsman of the short story. Indeed, there were few areas of literature Bierce did not explore fully before he disappeared into the Mexican revolution in 1913 at the age of 71, never to be seen again. Autobiography, however, was one of them. Joshi and Schultz seek successfully to fill this void by supplementing Bierce's brief "Bits of Autobiography" with rich slices of first-person reportage from throughout his published and unpublished writings. These slices include Bierce's eyewitness accounts of Shiloh and other great battles of the Civil War, along with previously lost autobiographical fragments from the pages of the San Francisco Examiner, the New York Journal and Cosmopolitan. Of particular value are excerpts of letters from the last nine years of Bierce's life that reveal him in several unlikely guises, among them mentor to the young Ezra Pound. Here we have Bierce as we've never had him before: writ large in his own words. His remarkable life could have no better narrator. (Sept.) FYI: Readers with weakening eyes may want to break out their glasses the typeface is quite small. Bukey
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