Glenway Wescott (1901-1987) was the author of the novels The Grandmothers and Apartment in Athens, in addition to several collections of stories and essays. His life-as revealed in his published journals and a joint biography of him and his lover, Monroe Wheeler-has been the subject of increasing interest in recent years. Michael Cunningham is the author of the novels A Home at the End of the World, Flesh and Blood, The Hours (winner of the Pen/Faulkner Award and Pulitzer Prize), and Specimen Days. He lives in New York.
“Among this century’s finest English-language novellas.”
—Samuel R. Delaney
“The ever-astonishing Pilgrim Hawk belongs, in my view, among the
treasures of twentieth-century American literature, however
untypical are its sleek, subtle vocabulary, the density of its
attention to character, its fastidious pessimism, and the clipped
worldliness of its point of view.”
—Susan Sontag
“[Wescott’s] pulling of the rug of surety from under the reader’s
feet is nothing less than what happens to a person proceeding
through life. [In the book] I find a deeper, sadder truth: the
truth of never being able to get to the bottom of it, of any of it.
Of love. Of marriage. Of sex. Of this life itself, so full of
appetite and thinking.”
—Jeffrey Eugenides, Lost Classics
“The reader is constantly being repositioned, constantly being
forced to see something he didn’t quite see before. Mr. Wescott’s
world is self-contained and precarious, and like the real one,
endlessly full of meaning.”
—HowardMmoss, The New Yorker
The author has created a strange, tense atmosphere, while telling
the story with delicacy and charm.
—Library Journal
“Glenway Wescott was part of a Midwestern movement in American
literature during the first decades of this century-the era of
Theodore Dreiser’s Sister Carrie, Willa Cather’s My Antonia,
Sinclair Lewis’ Main Street, and O.E. Rolvaag’s Giants in the
Earth.... [Wescott] remains an appealing and distinctive minor
master.
—The Washington Post Book World
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |