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Carlos Baker (1909–1987)

Author of Ernest Hemingway: A Life Story

22+ Works 1,101 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Carlos Baker

Associated Works

Green Mansions (1904) — Introduction, some editions — 1,894 copies, 28 reviews
Shelley's Poetry and Prose [Norton Critical Edition, 1st ed.] (1977) — Contributor — 309 copies, 2 reviews
Literary history of the United States (1963) — Contributor — 200 copies
The Prelude: Selected Poems and Sonnets (1954) — Editor — 150 copies, 1 review
The English Romantics: Major Poetry and Critical Theory (1978) — Contributor — 47 copies, 1 review
The Sun Also Rises / A Farewell to Arms / The Old Man and the Sea (1962) — Introduction, some editions — 43 copies, 1 review
Strange Maine (1986) — Contributor — 16 copies
Keats: Poems and Selected Letters (1962) — Editor — 13 copies
Coleridge: Poetry and Prose — Editor, some editions — 2 copies

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Common Knowledge

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Discussions

sibyx and labwriter read an Emerson biography in 75 Books Challenge for 2011 (September 2011)

Reviews

10 reviews
The gold standard of Hemingway biographies, Carlos Baker was the only reputable biographer to have discussed at length the life and work of Hemingway with the author himself. It's not necessarily the best biography (I like Kenneth Lynn's book better), but it's absolutely an indispensable volume for students of Hemingway's life and work.
2927 Emerson Among the Eccentrics: A Group Portrait, by Carlos Baker (read 15 Nov 1996) This 1996 book begins in the 1830's, after the death of Emerson's first wife, and goes to his death on April 27, 1882, at the age of 72. There were parts of the book which were not too interesting, especially in the early part. I have never been too interested in Emerson's prose or poetry (the one poem of his I know by heart - his "Concord Hymn" - gets only the fleetest of mentions in this book) and this show more book is more scholarly than popular and it uses few of the popular biographers' devices to whet interest. When Emerson was about 70 he began losing his memory and when he went to Longfellow's funeral on March 27, 1882, he looked in the casket and asked "Where are we? What house? And who is the sleeper?" One is amazed at how much contact Emerson had with famous people--Concord, Mass., in his day was a veritable wellspring of literature. show less
Its kinda lame...it has some nice phrases here and there, but this book has too many pages with nothing on it, too long, theres barely something in there to actually read. I cant believe that i was reading the condensed version, the original one mustve been bullshit.
Selections --some non-fiction prose, some short stories, about Ameruicans seeing Europe (including Emerson, Robetr Benchley, Hemingway. Mark Twain, Thomas Wolfe), Africa/Near East (W>E>B> Du Bois), the Far East (Pearl Buck, Margaret Mead), Latin America (B. Traven, T.B. Ybarra0, and te US itself -- (Henry Adams, Mencken.) One iontersting leser-known piecev is Henry Doud's Six Months with the Jap Infantry, by an US Arm officer who served six months as an observer with the Japanese army in show more 1934-35. show less

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Statistics

Works
22
Also by
12
Members
1,101
Popularity
#23,343
Rating
3.8
Reviews
6
ISBNs
39
Languages
5

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