Bookmarked: Reading My Way from Hollywood to Brooklyn, by Wendy W. Fairey
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Bookmarked: Reading My Way from Hollywood to Brooklyn, by Wendy W. Fairey
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Wendy Fairey grew up among books. As the shy and studious daughter of famed Hollywood columnist Sheilah GrahamF. Scott Fitzgerald’s lover during the last years of his lifeshe began as a child reading her way through the library Fitzgerald had assembled for her mother and escaped into the landscape of classic English novels. Their protagonists became her intimates, starting with David Copperfield, whose sensibility and aspirations seemed so akin to her own. She felt as plain as Jane Eyre but craved the panache of Becky Sharp. English novels squired her to adulthood, and Bookmarked is a memoir of that journey.In a series of brilliant chapters that blend the genres of personal memoir and literary criticism, we follow Fairey, refracted through her reading, as student, wife, professor, mother, grandmother, and happily remarried writer. E. M. Forster’s Howards End helps her cope with a failing marriage; Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Ramsay teaches important lessons about love and memory. Like Eliot’s Daniel Deronda, she learns only as an adult of her Jewish heritage (and learns also the identity of her real father, the British philosopher A. J. Ayer). In this intimate and inspiring book, Wendy Fairey shows that her love of reading has been both a source of deep personal pleasure and key to living a fulfilling and richly self-examined life.Skyhorse Publishing, along with our Arcade, Good Books, Sports Publishing, and Yucca imprints, is proud to publish a broad range of biographies, autobiographies, and memoirs. Our list includes biographies on well-known historical figures like Benjamin Franklin, Nelson Mandela, and Alexander Graham Bell, as well as villains from history, such as Heinrich Himmler, John Wayne Gacy, and O. J. Simpson. We have also published survivor stories of World War II, memoirs about overcoming adversity, first-hand tales of adventure, and much more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.
Bookmarked: Reading My Way from Hollywood to Brooklyn, by Wendy W. Fairey- Amazon Sales Rank: #207857 in Books
- Brand: Fairey, Wendy W.
- Published on: 2015-03-10
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.10" h x 1.30" w x 6.30" l, .0 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 288 pages
Review Praise for Bookmarked"Fairey’s book is an eloquent argument on behalf of novels and their power to both reflect and enhance our lives." Boston Globe"A warm story of the force of literature in [Fairey's] life and choices . . . [It] will especially appeal to readers already fond of good books who want insights into how reading changes lives." —Midwest Book Review"Wendy Fairey looks unblinkingly at her own life, analyzing, admitting, parsing. . . . [This book] is memoir. It is an unusual take on literary criticism. But most important of all, it is a book about a person who is an extraordinary educator. She brings every volume alive for us." East Hampton Star"Bookish folk will relish her conviction that literature speaks directly to personal experience. . . . Memoirs of Hollywood, and of children's recollections of the famous, abound, but this very bookish one, uniquely, is rereadable." Publishers Weekly"This memoir enables readers to confirm how works of fiction shape lives." Library JournalBookmarked is a gorgeous journey through Fairey’s rather fascinating life, interwoven with analyses of books she taught that transformed her. A window onto a deeply personal understanding of great literature. I was moved and could not put this memoir down.” Ally Sheedy, actressPeople interested in good novels, good gossip, and the conjunctions of real and imagined lives will enjoy this memoir. Wendy Fairey’s pleasure in reading and recalling her own story and other people’s is contagious.” Rachel Brownstein, author of Why Jane Austen?Fairey brilliantly illustrates the enduring power of literature by employing her mastery and profound love of the classics to shine a light on the mysteries of her own life. An irresistible work of compelling scholarship and quiet beauty.” Nancy Goldstone, author of The Maid and the Queen and The Rival QueensWendy Fairey is a literary scholar, but don’t let that fool you. Her lifelong infatuation with the novel has been a journey of the heart, as well as the mind. Her story is both unique and familiar. It’s not that her scholar’s voice has disappeared. It has simply been tempered and made even stronger by an understanding much broader than critical analysis. Fairey reminds us here that reading can beand really it should bea personal, life-enriching pursuit.” Frye Gaillard, author of The Books That Mattered: A Reader’s MemoirWendy Fairey has gifted us with a superb literary memoir. Her journey from lonely insider/outsider daughter of famed Hollywood columnist Sheilah Graham to courageous writer, teacher, and zestful activist occurs mostly between the covers of such cherished authors as Charles Dickens, George Eliot, and Virginia Woolf. Vividly written, profoundly insightful, every lover of literature and women’s lives will be inspired by Bookmarked. It is entirely enchanting.” Blanche Wiesen Cook, author of Eleanor Roosevelt vols. I, II, and III (forthcoming)Praise for One of the FamilyLike many children who have been victimized by a parent who lied to survive or better themselves, Wendy Fairey has the classic compensatory drive to tell nothing but the truth. . . . She says, My mother wanted to be a serious writer.’ And with her thoughtful, literary autobiography, Ms. Fairey has become just that.” Jill Johnston, New York Times Book ReviewA remarkable, original text.” Anne Chisholm, Times Literary Supplement[Fairey] is finally forced to recognize that both her father and her mother were in fact monstrous egotists. Yet she is not sorry. They were exceptional people, and to her continuing amazement, she is the daughter of them both. To know this,’ she concludes, makes me more securely myself.’ It has also enabled her at last to write her own bookand it is a genuinely fascinating one.” Derwent May, The Times (London)". . . a graceful and moving personal examination." Kirkus"This well-written and thoughtful memoir is highly recommended." Library Journal
About the Author Wendy W. Fairey holds a doctorate from Columbia University and teaches English literature and creative writing at Brooklyn College, where she was also formerly a dean. She is the author of One of the Family (Norton 1992), a family memoir, and Full House (SMU Press 2002), a collection of linked stories. Fairey is married to Mary Edith Mardis with whom she lives in Manhattan and East Hampton. She has two children and four grandchildren.
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Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Books as Life-long Companions By John S. Major Wendy Fairey shares with her favorite Victorian writers a gift for narrative energy; her memoir of a lifetime “marked by books” reads like a good novel. A devoted reader from an early age, she quickly realized that great books are not distinguished by well-framed plots and well-hewn prose alone; they also are moral mirrors, illuminating the mindful reader to herself. In this lucid account of a life of personal and professional accomplishment as well as a full share of difficulties, Wendy Fairey gives due credit to the fictional characters who inspired, challenged, and comforted her along the way – who became her friends and life companions. Bookmarked is an absorbing read, and an inspiration for those of us who cannot live without books.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Loved the book By Jean Crichton I just finished Bookmarked and feel bereft, because I really enjoyed it. The author manages to take us inside the books that influenced her as a child, as an adult, as a literature professor, and interweave those understandings into a look at her very interesting life. I really couldn't put it down. Some of the books I realized I had not read--and I put them on my list, like David Copperfield, and Jane Eyre, which I must have read but really can't remember. As for the ones I have read, Bookmarked gave me a new vantage point.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A gorgeous work! By Geraldine DeLuca I love this book! It reads itself like a novel: each chapter locates us at a moment in the reader's life and explores the impact of the book she is discussing. And she is an exquisite reader! Immersing myself in her universe of books attuned me freshly to the ways novels invite us into a symbolic world where forces operate consistently and details cohere. As she places each work in the larger framework of nineteenth-century fiction, we see the themes of the century unfold and change. She also draws us into the realm of her imagination, explaining how these powerful works shaped her sense of personhood, how characters mirrored and supported her in defining her evolving identity.As a reader, I engaged in her discriminations. What did David Copperfield mean to me when I first encountered him? Becky Sharpe? Dorothea Brooke? Isabel Archer? Who was I, who am I in relation to nineteenth-century fiction? How did these stories shape my sense of self? if they didn’t, which books did?Along with offering us this sharp-eyed, deeply learned and always personal study of the novels, Fairey allowed us into the privileged and yet often painfully deprived world of a young woman who seeks to understand and protect herself in relation to a bold, famous, often outrageous mother, an absent father, a miserable stepfather. We go with her as she explores her sexuality, raises her children and becomes a brave, knowledgeable teacher. Moving from David Copperfield's question of whether he will become the hero of his own life to the stories of Indian women who are writing to become the hero of theirs, Fairey pursues the question for herself through the work.It is sometimes said that one has to love another in order to truly know her. Fairey's work supports this view. She loves these books, this field, her work as a teacher and writer. And she knows it deeply. And in loving this book, we come to know and love her. We are grateful for her learned, honest work.
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