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Works by Elliot Engel

A Dickens of a Christmas (1997) 9 copies
Eat, Think, & Be Merry (2005) 6 copies
The Inimitable Winston Churchill (1994) 3 copies, 1 review
The Dickens Nobody Knows (2000) 2 copies

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1948
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

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Reviews

9 reviews
How Oscar Became WILDE would have earned the full 5 stars if not for Eliot Engel's glorification
of Hemingway's glorification of the obscene sickening cruelty of the "sport" of bullfighting.

This entry was extremely disappointing and unexpected in an otherwise eminently readable,
entertaining, and expansive collection of essays based on the author's college lectures.
The author gives 'essays' a new life compared with the endless (but great!) Emersons.

One odd thing is that he writes that Dickens show more is unrealistic, giving "No one in real life is as stingy as Scrooge"
as an example. Yet, he has just mentioned three who qualify: Robert Browning's paternal grandfather,
the selfish Edward Barrett, and cruel John Allan.

Similarly, he totally credits the superior role dominated by men as the main reason for women not excelling as writers.
What about early and forced marriages, frequent death in childbirth, dependence on men for support, and consumption
(affected women more than men at that time)...?

The essay on Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was the most surprising; Frost, the most unusual, Wilde, the least revealing (because
so much time has passed since book was published); with Mark Twain the most fun.

Other enlightening favorites include Chaucer, Shakespeare, Emily Dickinson, Poe, Dickens, and the Brownings.
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This is a very fun book to read for all avid readers! The book is a collection of essays on the lives of seventeen authors ranging from Chaucer to Austen to Hemingway. The essays are humorous and clever and bring out an aspect of the author's life or writing that you may not have thought of before. Engel is a lecturer and as you read the essays you can almost hear them being spoken. I had a lot of fun reading this book.
A series of essays, more like lectures, about various authors considered part of the "canon". I was pleased to find that the author had managed to move outside the "dead white male" mode and include a scattering of women. Since it was focused on English language literature and went no further than the early part of the 20th century, no people of color were represented. It was a worthwhile book, detailing the lives of the authors and putting that into the context of how that influenced what show more they wrote. In some cases, I suspect he may have been overinterpreting, but it was an interesting look at the lives of some prominent authors. show less
½
This is an insightful and interesting look at 17 famous literary authors and their fascinatingly flawed lives.

From Geoffrey Chaucer through Robert Frost, Engel provides amazing insights into their lives, works and the motivations.

Should you want to toss around facts at a cocktail party, or if you are playing trivial pursuit and need the answers, it might help to know:

Charles Dickens earned 68 million for his writings. He is the top grossing author studied in school. A financial failure, his show more father's irresponsibility led his family to be thrown into debtors prison. Twelve year old Charles went to work in a shoe polish factory.

Vowing not to be like his father, Dickens became a very shrewd business man. In marketing The Pickwick Papers, Dickens invented the concept of the paperback book.

Edgar Allan Poe had a terrible, heartbreaking childhood and his doom and gloom horrific life bled into the pages of all his works. Interestingly, the inspiration for The Raven came from a conversation with Charles Dickens whose beloved pet -- a raven -- drank lead poison and died.

Oscar Wilde contracted syphilis from a woman prostitute. The use of mercury for a "cure" turned his teeth black. Sadly, later in life, at the height of his career, because of a law suit that should never have occurred, Wilde has disgraced and ostracized. He died a lonely pauper.

Mark Twain has Louisa May Alcott, the author of Little Women, to thank for his early success and acclaim for Huckleberry Finn.

Disgusted by the topic of the son of an alcoholic who took a river boat trip with a black slave, Alcott went to the Massachusetts library board and had the book banned, stating it had nothing to do with the "good" and "proper" society, and that it was too low and dirty, containing "dirty incidents." Alcott's rantings backfired.

Twain, counting on the fact that people might be intrigued with a book containing "dirty incidents", shrewdly turned this to his advantage and took out full page ads in magazines and newspapers noting the book had been banned. Sales then sky rocketed.

Charlotte Bronte's character Jane Eyre, was portrayed as a plain governess. In life, a young man attending a dinner party noted of Charlotte that "she would have to be twice as good looking as she actually is to be considered homely."

Thomas Hardy was thought to be stillborn. Cast aside as dead, the midwife noticed life. Fearful that he would actually die, his mother did not bond with him. Throughout life, he could not stand to be touched.

I tremendously enjoyed this book. The author's writing was clear, insightful and incredibly informative.
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Statistics

Works
23
Members
200
Popularity
#110,007
Rating
4.0
Reviews
9
ISBNs
24
Languages
1

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