Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 3rd July 2014
Hardback, 2nd edition
Published: 11th July 2024
Paperback, 2nd edition
Published: 11th July 2024
Barbara Kingsolver's World: Nature, Art, and the Twenty-First Century, Revised Edition
By (Author) Prof Linda Wagner-Martin
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
11th July 2024
2nd edition
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Biography: writers
Narrative theme: Environmental issues / the natural world
Literary studies: from c 2000
813.54
Hardback
264
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
A revised edition of Linda Wagner-Martin's comprehensive study of the novels, stories, essays and poetry of American author Barbara Kingsolver. Now updated so that coverage runs from Kingsolver's first novel, The Bean Trees, through to her most recent, Demon Copperhead. Author of the only biography of Barbara Kingsolver and of a readers guide to The Poisonwood Bible, Wagner-Martin has become the leading authority on this Pulitzer-prize-wining author. Here she covers every work in Kingsolvers oeuvre, emphasizing the writers blend of the scientific method in which she was formally trained with her convincing understanding of the human characters that fill her books. What Kingsolver achieves throughout all her writing is a seamless blending of the various parts of human existence. She melds important themes through parts and pieces of the natural worldthe African snakes, the Monarch butterflies, the coyotes in Deanna Wolfes existence. Repeatedly Kingsolver writes to create both characters and the characters worlds, bringing all these pieces into masterful, and whole, realities. This edition includes two new chapters - one on her 2018 novel, Unsheltered, and the second on her 2022 novel, Demon Copperhead - and is the first study of Kingsolver to publish since she was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2023.
Linda Wagner-Martin is Frank Borden Hanes Professor of English and Comparative Literature Emerita at The University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. She is the author or editor of over 50 books, including Toni Morrison, A Literary Life (Macmillan, 2015), The Oxford Companion to Womens Writing in the United States (ed. with Cathy N. Davidson, Oxford University Press, 1995), and Maya Angelou: Adventurous Spirit (Bloomsbury 2015, 2021 2nd ed). She is the recipient of many awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Hubbell Medal from the Modern Language Association. She has been a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute, at Rollins College, at Bellagio and at Bogliasco. She has served as president of The Ernest Hemingway Foundation and Society and the American Literature Division of the Modern Language Association. She has won many teaching awards, particularly at Michigan State University and University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.