D.H. Lawrence (1885–1930), a novelist, storywriter, critic,
poet, and painter, was one of the greatest figures in
twentieth-century English literature. Among his many works are Sons
and Lovers, The Rainbow, and Women in Love.
Geoff Dyer was born in Cheltenham, England. He is the author
of four novels—Paris Trance, The Search, The Colour of Memory, and
Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi—and several works of nonfiction,
including Ways of Telling, But Beautiful: A Book About Jazz, and
Yoga for People Who Can’t Be Bothered to Do It. He lives in Los
Angeles, where he is a writer in residence at the University of
Southern California.
"Lawrence’s work is as relevant to modern debates about speech and
power as it was to the ones that fueled the notoriety in his
lifetime.” —Lucas Iberico Lozada, Vanity Fair
“[Lawrence’s] writing is often pure pleasure . . . A quirky,
wide-ranging compendium, revealing Lawrence's character and debates
over life, art, and faith between the world wars.” —Kirkus
"Let [Lawrence] travel, unleash him on a debauched person
like Magnus, give him sense perceptions and concrete
details to chew on—what happens is stunning . . . His
sentences are so unbridled and fresh, and so weirdly perfect.
Even when he chars a subject, reduces it to ash, the prose is
still large and additional like a flame, wondrously rippling
in the air.” —Zachary Fine, The Nation
“The Bad Side of Books contains essays about Thomas Mann and
Ernest Hemingway, about Italian flowers and roadside crucifixes,
about Cézanne and Van Gogh, about arriving in New Mexico and
returning to England. Just about every time, Lawrence has
interesting and original observations to make about his subject. .
. . To read Lawrence observing something is to witness one of
literature’s stunning wonders.” —Robert Minto, Los Angeles
Review of Books
"Most of this material was new to me, and I enjoyed this book
enormously." —Dwight Garner, The New York Times
"As Geoff Dyer stresses in his penetrating introduction, Lawrence
ignores genre straitjackets as he blends travel writing,
memoir, philosophical musings, storytelling and a novelist’s flair
for portraiture and description. . . . No matter what he
writes about, though, Lawrence generates—in language crackling
with passion and conviction—an intensely reimagined experience.
Jonathan Swift, when challenged, could produce a brilliant
essay about a broomstick; Lawrence outdoes him in his
tour-de-force 'Reflections on the Death of a Porcupine.’” —Michael
Dirda, Washington Post
“[W]hy has the New York Review Books Classics imprint
brought out a new edition of his selected essays? Because there’s
much more to Lawrence’s work than his detractors care to admit.
There is his complex and vivid philosophy, based on following one’s
primal drives into a more sensual engagement with life and a more
honest sense of self. And there is, above all, the lush beauty of
his language, prose that has a pulse and gives off
heat.” —Scott Beauchamp, Washington Examiner
“[Lawrence] had the defects of his qualities: he had no defects, he
was a genius. . . . He was fiery and flamey and lambent, he was
flickering and white-hot and glowing. . . . The defects of his
qualities, yes, but what qualities.” —Doris Lessing, The New York
Review of Books
“Lawrence is one of our true prophets, not only in his ‘madness for
the unknown’ . . . but in his lifelong development of a technique,
a fictional and poetic way in which the prophetic voice can be
given formal expression.” —Joyce Carol Oates
“Geoff Dyer has selected some of [Lawrence's] most fascinating and
accessible pieces to tempt new readers. . . . This is very much a
volume for the general reader . . . Comedy and humour abound, as
does a provocative honesty. . . . There are countless examples
in this volume of Lawrence at his poetic best.” —Gerri Kimber, The
Times Literary Supplement
“It is high time that Lawrence’s non-fiction had another airing. .
. . For anyone who hasn’t read any Lawrence, I would readily
recommend it as a good place to start. It presents Lawrence as
diverse, brilliant, and strange. He was all these things.
—Catherine Brown, Prospect Magazine
“[Lawrence] seems to bypass [art] and interpose nothing between the
reader and the vision. . . . To read him is to feel oneself in
contact with a personality that has broken through form and
rhetoric and confronts one in a kind of nakedness.” —Anthony
Burgess, Flame into Being: The Life and Work of D.H. Lawrence
“[Lawrence] had an extraordinary sensitiveness to what Wordsworth
called ‘unknown modes of being.’ He was always intensely aware of
the mystery of the world, and the mystery was always for him a
numen, divine.” —Aldous Huxley
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