The Bookman

The Bookman
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 704
Release: 1911
Genre: Book collecting
ISBN:

Book Bulletin

Book Bulletin
Author: Chicago Public Library
Publisher:
Total Pages: 638
Release: 1912
Genre:
ISBN:

Booklist

Booklist
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 500
Release: 1912
Genre: Best books
ISBN:

Library Bulletin

Library Bulletin
Author: Somerville Public Library (Mass.).
Publisher:
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1910
Genre: Public libraries
ISBN:

The Bookseller

The Bookseller
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 906
Release: 1911
Genre: Bibliography
ISBN:

Official organ of the book trade of the United Kingdom.

Oscar Wilde

Oscar Wilde
Author: Matthew Sturgis
Publisher: Knopf
Total Pages: 864
Release: 2021-10-12
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0525656375

The fullest, most textural, most accurate—most human—account of Oscar Wilde's unique and dazzling life—based on extensive new research and newly discovered materials, from Wilde's personal letters and transcripts of his first trial to newly uncovered papers of his early romantic (and dangerous) escapades and the two-year prison term that shattered his soul and his life. "Simply the best modern biography of Wilde." —Evening Standard Drawing on material that has come to light in the past thirty years, including newly discovered letters, documents, first draft notebooks, and the full transcript of the libel trial, Matthew Sturgis meticulously portrays the key events and influences that shaped Oscar Wilde's life, returning the man "to his times, and to the facts," giving us Wilde's own experience as he experienced it. Here, fully and richly portrayed, is Wilde's Irish childhood; a dreamy, aloof boy; a stellar classicist at boarding school; a born entertainer with a talent for comedy and a need for an audience; his years at Oxford, a brilliant undergraduate punctuated by his reckless disregard for authority . . . his arrival in London, in 1878, "already noticeable everywhere" . . . his ten-year marriage to Constance Lloyd, the father of two boys; Constance unwittingly welcoming young men into the household who became Oscar's lovers, and dying in exile at the age of thirty-nine . . . Wilde's development as a playwright. . . becoming the high priest of the aesthetic movement; his successes . . . his celebrity. . . and in later years, his irresistible pull toward another—double—life, in flagrant defiance and disregard of England's strict sodomy laws ("the blackmailer's charter"); the tragic story of his fall that sent him to prison for two years at hard labor, destroying his life and shattering his soul.