Keith Botsford: Difference between revisions
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
==Published works== |
==Published works== |
||
===Articles=== |
|||
"Reflexions on Kennedy," ''Kolokol: Grafica Panamericana''(Mexico), January 25, 1964. |
|||
"Mexico Follows a 'Solo Camino'," ''New York Times'', April 26, 1964. |
|||
"'There is No Censorship,' Said Poland's Censor: Report From a Surrealist Capital," |
|||
''New York Times'', September 11, 1966. |
|||
"Why Students in France Go Communist; Elite Proletarians All," ''New York Times'', November 13, 1966. |
|||
"If ''Les Mao'' Won Their Revolution, They Would Immediately Start Another Maoist ''Cause Celebre''," |
|||
''New York Times'', September 17, 1972. |
|||
"Look Who's in Bed with Whom: Decision in France," ''New York Times'', March 4, 1973. |
|||
"The White Rolls-Royce: Stars Beyond the Firmament," ''New York Times'', March 25, 1973. |
|||
"The Music and the Man: Hindemith," ''New York Times'', November 27, 1977. |
|||
"A God Who Made Words," ''New York Times'', December 27, 1981. |
|||
"The Pollini Sound," ''New York Times'', March 1, 1987. |
|||
"Maverick Violinist," ''New York Times'', October 2, 1988. |
|||
"Symposium: Who Are the Five Most Underrated and/or Overrated Musicians, and Why?" |
|||
[http://www.boulevardmagazine.org/read-extracts.html ''Boulevard''], Fall 2010, Vol. 25, nos. 2 and 3. |
|||
===Translations=== |
===Translations=== |
Revision as of 23:51, 28 October 2015
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for biographies. (August 2015) |
Keith Botsford (born March 29, 1928, in Brussels, Belgium) is an American/European writer, Professor Emeritus at Boston University and current editor of News from the Republic of Letters.
Career
Botsford’s work as a novelist is divided into two periods: the first four novels – The Master Race [1955], The Eighth-best-dressed-Man in the World [1957], Benvenuto [1961] and The March-Man [1964] – were either semi-autobiographical or political in nature; his later books (after he returned to fiction in 1989) include three major autobiographical works: O Brother! [2000], The Mothers [2002], and Death and the Maiden [2007] form a coherent trilogy about his brother, his early wives (and mothers) and, in the last, a reprise of The March-Man, his father.[1] During this second period he also published a series of stories and novellas, described as ‘imaginary biographies’, collected in Out of Nowhere [2000]. At the same time he also wrote five non-fiction books on sporting figures and four crime and espionage novels under the pseudonym I.I. Magdalen.
Published works
Translations
- Sixth Form 1939, by Marcella Olschki. Publisher: Toby Press, August 2002, 72 pages translated by Keith Botsford.
- Women and Faith: Catholic Religious Life in Italy from Late Antiquity to the Present, by Lucetta Scaraffia. Publisher Harvard University Press, November 1, 1999, 432 pages, translated by Keith Botsford.
- The Sacralization of Politics in Fascist Italy, by Emilio Gentile. Publisher Harvard University Press, September 1, 1996, 222 pages, translated by Keith Botsford.
- The House of Others, by Silvio D’Arzo. Publisher Marlboro Press, October 15, 1995, 125 pages, translated by Keith Botsford.
- Inevitable Illusions: How Mistakes of Reason Rule Our Minds, by Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini. Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc., October 20, 1994, 256 pages, translated by Keith Botsford.
- History of the French Revolution: Volume VI, Books 11, 12 13, by Jules Michelet. Publisher: Livingston Publishing, 1973, translated by Keith Botsford
- Human Relations Area Files (anthropology) 1958-1960, eight books manly on Viet Nam, translated by Keith Botsford
Book introduction
Ceremony in Lone Tree, by Wright Morris. Publisher: Bison Books, September 1, 2001, 304 pages. Introduction by Keith Botsford
Web
Magazines
- Founding editor
- Delos
- Kolokol
- Co-founding editors Keith Botsford & Saul Bellow
- ANON
- The Noble Savage
- News from The Republic of Letters
- Editor
Bostonia, Poetry New York, Grand Prix International, Yale Poetry Review
- Contributing editor
Leviathan, Stand, The Warwick Review
Newspaper articles
The Sunday Times of London, The Independent, La Stampa
References
- Debrett's People of Today, UK;[1]
- Books [2];
- "Encuentro con Keith Botsford", Insula, num. 262, p. 4;
- "Jedno udane zycie", Tygodnk Powszechni, 22, p. 36ff;
- "Czlowiek Rwnwsansu", Henryk Skwarczynski, Odra, no.7-8, vol XLVIII, 2008
- The American University of Paris - Center for Writers and Translators;[3]
External links
- The Keith Botsford Papers at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University
- Articles needing cleanup from December 2008
- Cleanup tagged articles without a reason field from December 2008
- Wikipedia pages needing cleanup from December 2008
- 1928 births
- Living people
- People from Brussels
- 20th-century American novelists
- American magazine editors
- Boston University faculty
- 21st-century American novelists
- American male novelists