The Wound and the Bow: Seven Studies in Literature
by Edmund Wilson
On This Page
Description
The Wound and the Bow contains seven essays by "The greatest literary critic of the twentieth century." -New York magazine.Combining biographical and critical sketches, Edmund Wilson writes brilliantly on a wide-range of authors including Dickens, Kipling, Edith Wharton, Ernest Hemingway, Joyce, Jacques Casanova, and Sophocles."In the best tradition of literary criticism... combines exact information with shrewd and searching penetration into the personal life of the artist."-The New York TimesTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
Penetrating essays, as usual from Wilson. On seven other writers: Dickens, Kipling, Casanova, Wharton, Hemingway, Joyce and Sophocles.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information

94+ Works 8,914 Members
Wilson roamed the world and read widely in many languages. He was a journalist for leading literary periodicals: Vanity Fair, where he was briefly managing editor; The New Republic, where he was associate editor for five years; and the New Yorker, where he was book reviewer in the 1940s. These varied experiences were typical of Wilson's range of show more interests and ability. Eternally productive and endlessly readable, he conquered American literature in countless essays. If he is idiosyncratic and lacks a rigid mold, that probably contributes to his success as a literary critic, since he was not committed to interpretation in the straitjacket of some popular approach or dogma. His critical position suits his cosmopolitan background---historical and sociological considerations prevail. He went through a brief Marxist period and experimented with Freudian criticism. Axel's Castle (1931), a penetrating analysis of the symbolist writer, has exerted a great influence on contemporary literary criticism. Its dedication, to Christian Gauss of Princeton, reads:"It was principally from you that I acquired.. .my idea of what literary criticism ought to be---a history of man's ideas and imaginings in the setting of the conditions which have shaped them."His volume of satiric short stories, Memoirs of Hecate County (1946), with its frankly erotic passages, was the subject of court cases in a less tolerant decade than the present one. It was Wilson's own favorite among his writings, but he complained that those individuals who like his other work tend to disregard it. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Some Editions
Work Relationships
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Wound and the Bow: Seven Studies in Literature
- Original publication date
- 1941
- Epigraph
- 'I bleed by the black stream for my torn bough!' James Joyce.
- First words
- Of all the great English writers, Charles Dickens has received in his own country the scantiest serious attention from either biographers, scholars, or critics.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 155
- Popularity
- 211,837
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (3.80)
- Languages
- English, Italian, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 8
- ASINs
- 11



























































