
Now in a more readable format, this sweeping collection ranges from the early 1600s through the 1980s and includes 140 essays by 120 of the finest writers in the history of the English language. John Gross, former book critic for The New York Times, has collected classics and rare gems, representative samples and personal favorites, intimate essays and learned, serious reflections and hysterically funny satire, by both British and American writers. The authors Gross has gathered form a gallery of genius, all indispensable masters of rhetoric, from Samuel Butler to Samuel Johnson, from George Eliot to George Bernard Shaw, from John Dryden to Ben Franklin, from E.B. White to Joan Didion. Including book reviews and travel sketches, history lessons and meditations, reflections on art and on potato chips, these essays sample four centuries of eloquence and insight in a collection that is at once immensely enlightening, edifying, and entertaining.
This collection investigates the evolution and breadth of the essay form across four centuries of English-language writing. John J. Gross, a former book critic for The New York Times, curates a selection of 140 works by 120 authors to demonstrate the versatility of the genre, ranging from formal rhetoric to informal personal reflection.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Critics and readers frequently cite this volume as a comprehensive survey of the essay as a literary form. Experts highlight the editorial selection as a balanced representation of both canonical masters and lesser-known writers.
Page Count:
704
Publication Date:
1999-06-24
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019288106X
ISBN-13:
9780192881069
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