Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett

Front Cover
Bloomsbury, 1997 - Biography & Autobiography - 872 pages
Samuel Beckett's long-standing friend, James Knowlson, recreates Beckett's youth in Ireland, his studies at Trinity College, Dublin in the early 1920s and from there to the Continent, where he plunged into the multicultural literary society of late-1920s Paris. The biography throws new light on Beckett's stormy relationship with his mother, the psychotherapy he received after the death of his father and his crucial relationship with James Joyce. There is also material on Beckett's six-month visit to Germany as the Nazi's tightened their grip. The book includes unpublished material on Beckett's personal life after he chose to live in France, including his own account of his work for a Resistance cell during the war, his escape from the Gestapo and his retreat into hiding. Obsessively private, Beckett was wholly committed to the work which eventually brought his public fame, beginning with the controversial success of Waiting for Godot in 1953, and culminating in the award of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969. James Knowlson is the general editor of The Theatrical Notebooks of Samuel Beckett.

About the author (1997)

James Knowlson is Emiritus Professor of French at the University of Reading where he founded the Beckett Archive (now the Beckett International Foundation). He was a friend of Samuel Beckett for twenty years and is his authorised biographer, publishing Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett with Bloomsbury in 1996. He has written and edited many other books and essays on Beckett and modern drama, including, most recently, Images of Beckett with theatre photographer John Haynes.....Dr Elizabeth Knowlson lectured in French at the University of Glasgow and later worked in the Centre for Applied Language Studies at the University of Reading. She assisted her husband with his biography of Beckett and his later books and essays.

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