Iris and her friends

Iris and her friends
About this book
"John Bayley began writing Iris and Her Friends, a sequel to the New York Times bestseller Elegy for Iris, late at night while his wife, the beloved novelist Iris Murdoch, succumbed to Alzheimer's Disease. In a Proustian irony, as Iris was losing her memory, Bayley was flooded with vivid recollections of his own."--BOOK JACKET.
"Avoiding the gloom associated with his family tragedy, Bayley luminously brings to life in Iris and Her Friends the remarkable story of a philosopher whose novels celebrated the goodness of everyday existence.
In bursts of vivid, lyrical reverie, Bayley also recreates the unforgettable scenes of his youth: being born to a civil servant in colonial India; his epiphanic childhood vacations at the seaside English resort Littlestone-on-Sea, which gave him his first, important glimmers of adult consciousness; his discovery of the power of literature, especially the work of Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Bowen, and Marcel Proust; and of course his long romance with Iris and its heartbreaking end."--BOOK JACKET.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL460585W
Subjects
English NovelistsCriticsMarried peoplePhilosophersPatientsMarriageAlzheimer's diseaseCollege teachersUniversity of OxfordBiographyEnglish Women novelistsWomen philosophersLarge type booksMurdoch, iris, 1919-1999Alzheimer's disease, patientsGreat britain, biography