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Sursum Corda!: The Collected Letters of Malcolm Lowry, Volume II: 1947-1957
 
 
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Sursum Corda!: The Collected Letters of Malcolm Lowry, Volume II: 1947-1957 [Hardcover]

Malcolm Lowry (Author), Sherrill E. Grace (Editor)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Hardcover, December 18, 1996 --  

Book Description

December 18, 1996

The general tone of this second volume of letters is considerably darker than that of the first. Though Under the Volcano (published in 1947) was behind Lowry, it would never leave him alone. The success of the novel became a curse: he could not avoid helping his translators; he longed for a film treatment of the book; he found it difficult to become fully engaged in new work; the celebrity associated with a best-seller was, as he put it in a poem, a 'disaster' akin to your house burning down.

Illnessses, the death of friends, threats of eviction from his beloved foreshore Dollarton home, and drink plagued Lowry. And yet, he made repeated attempts to escape his personal abysses. He made new friends, re-established a good working relationship with his editor Albert Erskine, began several new projects, and continued to write superb letters. The more than 400 included here, all written during the last decade of his life, reveal a man fascinated with films, bristling with plans for his masterwork The Voyage That Never Ends, eager to discuss the virtues of Faulkner, Fitzgerald, Cocteau, and the work of friends like Gerald Noxon or Jimmy Stern. There is also a selection from his several hundred 'love notes' written to Margerie Lowry and pinned to places in the Dollarton shack or to trees along the 'forest path to spring.' These notes, like much else in the volume, are published here for the first time, providing interesting glimpses into Lowry's private world. The letters written just before his sudden death in England in 1957 are among his most moving; they reveal a weariness of spirit, a deep regret for the loss of his Dollarton paradise, but also the courage, self-deprecating humour, love of language, and keen intelligence that characterize everything he wrote.

In addition to a critical introduction and detailed chronologies, this volume includes photographs, many of the drawings with which Lowry illustrated his letters, and reproductions of holograph letters.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

'Sursum Corda! shows Malcolm Lowry as a dedicated and painstaking man, as well as a driven one. The letters collected in it are all of a piece with the best of his prose and his verse. They tell of Lowry as a lonely man (perhaps only he knew how lonely), but a man completely confident and at home in his own great gifts. I think they bear comparison with the letters of any other artist of our century.'

(Robert Nye Scotland on Sunday )

'The two volumes will be a monument to what may be the last great age of letter writing ... Sherrill Grace has done an imaginative and exhaustive job of transcribing, editing and annotating these letters ... [Her annotations underline the richness, exuberance and complexity of Lowry's experience, and why, in spite of the living hell that so often encompassed his life, he could end so many of his letters with the words that Grace has chosen for the overall title of her two volumes: "Sursum Corda" - Lift up Your Hearts!'

(Peter Buitenhuis The Globe and Mail )

About the Author

Sherrill Grace is a professor in the Department of English at the University of British Columbia.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 800 pages
  • Publisher: University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division; 1 edition (December 18, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0802041183
  • ISBN-13: 978-0802041180
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.5 x 2.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,573,196 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Love of language, literature, life, March 17, 2003
By 
Daniel Myers (Greenville, SC USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Sursum Corda!: The Collected Letters of Malcolm Lowry, Volume II: 1947-1957 (Hardcover)
It is no doubt Lowry initiates, scholars and afficianados at whom this book was and, therefore, this review will be, primarily aimed. I have no inkling as to why only Volume II is included here. It may be simply a slip on Amazon's part (I didn't realize myself that there were two volumes amounting to almost 2,000 pages until I ordered it) or that the first volume is listed as out of print. But this review applies to both volumes which, by the bye, may be ordered as one, if not from Amazon, from Edward R Hamilton booksellers.

It is difficult to put into words the boundless joy that accompanies the reading of these letters. Here is Lowry at his most winkingly self-deprecatory, literarily allusive and, above all, charming and downright funny. For anyone who values the English Language and English literature highly; as, in fact, necessary to life, as Lowry did, these letters will hold you spellbound. Here is indeed the record of a man who, quite literally, lived and died for language and literature. As his most famous letter here, the one to his publisher which ultimately led to the publication of Under The Volcano, has it, "...but just the same in our Elizbethan days we used to have at least passionate poetic writing about things that will always mean something and not just silly ... style and semicolon technique: and in this sense I am trying to remedy a deficiency, to strike a blow, to fire a shot for you as it were, roughly in the direction, say, of another Renaissance: it will probably go straight through my brain but that is another matter."

It is clear from almost every letter here, that Lowry was trying his damnedest,in all his writings, to live up to this manifesto; that, despite the continual tragedies of his life, he was always picking himself up and wringing from his life "passionate poetic writing", which, it is clear from these letters, was, to a great extent, lived as a literary endeavour.

That the shot did eventually go through his brain, so to speak, was not entirely unexpected by Lowry or anyone who knew him. - But neither was Sir Walter Ralegh's unjust execution. - Ultimately then, these collected letters live up to the title: Sursum Corda!-Lift up your hearts!-Here is page upon page of writing about things that will always mean something: Love of life, literature, words and a delight in language in and of itself.-

Unrealistic though my expectaation of their reading of these two massive tomes may be, I would recommend them to anyone who suffers from the peculiar fate of being human.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
IF ONE SUBJECT dominates Lowry's correspondence between 1947 and 1951, it is Under the Volcano. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
pencil holograph, card phc, bravest boat, certain auxiliary circumstances, whole bolus, lunar caustic, tiniest script, hold that note, dear duck, flying enterprise, quam celerrime, very best love, pencil draft, postmark date, inside address, sursum corda, lettres nouvelles, fondest love
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Editorial Notes, New York, Albert Erskine, Malcolm Annotations, Malcolm Lowry, David Markson, Random House, Harold Matson, October Ferry, Conrad Aiken, Downie Kirk, Frank Taylor, Gerald Noxon, Clarisse Francillon, British Columbia, Forest Path, John Davenport, Strange Comfort, Margerie Bonner, Philippe Thoby-Marcelin, United States, Harvey Burt, Comfort Afforded, Earle Birney, Malc Annotations
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Front Cover | Front Flap | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Flap | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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