|
| |
| | Literary Encyclopedia: David Lodge |
 | | Lodge attributes his decision to write comedy to this experience and Bradbury's influence. |  | | Focussed on a day in the life of a harassed post-graduate student named Adam Appleby, it included pastiches of a number of prose styles and was a modest hommage to Joyce's Ulysses. |  | | In 1966 Lodge published both a short book on Graham Greene and his very influential book of novel criticism, The Language of Fiction. |
|
http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=2773
(1976 words)
|
|
| |
| | Encyclopedia: David Lodge (author) |
 | | Author, Author is not quite a new departure (the great novelist Henry James was a presence in Lodges much-acclaimed Thinks
), but here The Master is the central character in a brilliantly vivid picture of the man and his times. |  | | Lodge deals sympathetically with James's perceived failure of his work, his intense craving for reward both adulatory and financial that always seemed within reach, be it in periodicals, books or the stage and that yet was always just out of reach or dashed by events outside his control. |  | | Lodge sustains the Jamesian point of view for most of Author, Author, framing it with two deathbed chapters in which consciousness is dispersed between different attendant figures. |
|
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/David-Lodge-(author)
(392 words)
|
|
| |
| | ipedia.com: David Lodge Article |
 | | David Lodge is a British author whose novels often satirize academia in general, and the humanities in particular. |  | | David Lodge (January 28, 1935 -) is a British author whose novels often satirize academia in general, and the humanities in particular. |  | | The British Museum Is Falling Down - 1965 |
|
http://www.ipedia.com/david_lodge.html
(176 words)
|
|
| |
| | David Lodge (1935-) |
 | | A further novel, Author, author, about the success and failure of Henry James, is due in September 2004. |  | | David's latest book of essays, published in the autumn of 2002, is entitled Consciousness and the novel: connected essays and includes discussion of Therapy and Thinks. |  | | Amy Welborn has an interesting page on the author on her website, entitled |
|
http://www3.shropshire-cc.gov.uk/lodge.htm
(653 words)
|
|
|