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Edmund Wilson

    May 8, 1895 – June 12, 1972

    Edmund Wilson was an American writer, literary, and social critic, widely regarded as the preeminent American man of letters of the 20th century. His extensive body of work and insightful analysis of American literature and society establish him as a pivotal figure in the literary landscape.

    Memoirs of Hecate County
    Axel’s Castle
    Patriotic Gore
    The Sixties
    The Wound and the Bow
    To the Finland Station
    • To the Finland Station

      A Study in the Writing and Acting of History

      • 608 pages
      • 22 hours of reading

      From the ideas of early 19th-century socialists to the thoughts of Marx, Engels, Lenin & Trotsky, Edmund Wilson traces the development of the political & intellectual movements that culminated in the Russian Revolution. TO THE FINLAND STATION is a work of history on a grand scale, at once sweeping, detailed, closely reasoned & passionately argued, that succeeds in painting an unforgettable picture--alive with conspirators, philosophers, utopians & nihilists--of the making of the modern world. 'The 1st thing that strikes us about To the Finland Station is the vastness of its scope...It is easily, equally at home in the philosopher's study, in the prisoner's cell, on the steppes, in the streets, melancholy in great country houses, choking in fetid industrial slums...It can remind us that our history is alive & open & rich with excitement & promise'--NY Times Book Review

      To the Finland Station
    • The Sixties

      • 968 pages
      • 34 hours of reading

      The Sixties, the last of Edmund Wilson's posthumously published journals, is a personal history that is also brilliant social comedy and an anatomy of the times. Edited by Wilson's biographer, this volume poignantly - and defiantly - records the final years of one of our foremost critics and writers, taking its place alongside his major works, including To the Finland Station, Patriotic Gore, The Shores of Light, and Letters on Literature and Politics, as an enduring

      The Sixties
    • Critical/biographical portraits of such notable figures as Harriet Beecher Stowe, Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, Ambrose Bierce, Mary Chesnut, William Tecumseh Sherman, and Oliver Wendell Holmes prove Wilson to be the consummate witness to the most eloquently recorded era in American history.

      Patriotic Gore
    • Patriotic Gore

      Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War

      Patriotic Gore