Allan Massie
Character Building
Fabulous Monsters: Dracula, Alice, Superman, and Other Literary Friends
By Alberto Manguel
Yale University Press 228pp £14.99
‘How Many Children Had Lady Macbeth?’ This was the title of a celebrated essay by the university don L C Knights, founder, along with F R Leavis, of the austere critical periodical Scrutiny. The question isn’t, as I recall, actually put in the text. It is there in the title as a rebuke to the critic A C Bradley, whose book on Shakespeare’s tragedies to the high-minded Scrutineers made the vulgar error of treating fictional characters as if they were real people about whose unrecorded lives one may speculate. Actually, Bradley never asked this question himself either, but he did allow himself to wonder where Hamlet might have been at the time of his father’s murder.
Such speculation was frivolous in the opinion of Knights and Leavis. Characters in Shakespeare exist only in the words on the page and the correct way to read Hamlet, Macbeth and so on is as ‘dramatic poems’. Well, I found this argument quite impressive when I was young
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It wasn’t until 1825 that Pepys’s diary became available for the first time. How it was eventually decrypted and published is a story of subterfuge and duplicity.
Kate Loveman tells the tale.
Kate Loveman - Publishing Pepys
Kate Loveman: Publishing Pepys
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Piers Brendon compares Benson’s journals to others from the 20th century.
Piers Brendon - Land of Dopes & Tories
Piers Brendon: Land of Dopes & Tories - The Benson Diaries: Selections from the Diary of Arthur Christopher Benson by Eamon Duffy & Ronald Hyam (edd)
literaryreview.co.uk
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Was he really the finer artist, asks Tanya Harrod, or is it time Gwen emerged from her brother’s shadow?
Tanya Harrod - Cut from the Same Canvas
Tanya Harrod: Cut from the Same Canvas - Artists, Siblings, Visionaries: The Lives and Loves of Gwen and Augustus John by Judith Mackrell
literaryreview.co.uk