The Life of Samuel JohnsonPenguin UK, 2008 M10 30 - 1312 pages In Boswell’s Life of Samuel Johnson, one of the towering figures of English literature is revealed with unparalleled immediacy and originality. While Johnson’s Dictionary remains a monument of scholarship, and his essays and criticism command continuing respect, we owe our knowledge of the man himself to this biography. Through a series of wonderfully detailed anecdotes, Johnson emerges as a sociable figure with a huge appetite for life, crossing swords with other great eighteenth-century luminaries, from Garrick and Goldsmith to Burney and Burke – even his long-suffering friend and disciple James Boswell. Yet Johnson had a vulnerable, even tragic, side and anxieties and obsessions haunted his private hours. Boswell’s sensitivity and insight into every facet of his subject’s character ultimately make this biography as moving as it is entertaining. |
From inside the book
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... Boswell is best remembered for this masterly biography of Johnson. His Journal of a Tour of the Hebrides appeared in 1785, one year after Johnson's death. The rest of Boswell's life was dedicated to the unsuccessful pursuit of a ...
... Boswell's London life there lies a common denominator. Boswell's piety and profligacy are both informed by the self-dramatizing, self-regarding quality of his character. In this respect Boswell's journal is not a record of his actions ...
... Boswell's performative idea of character, so perfectly parallel are its reflecting planes of performance and reception. Into this strange world of dissoluteness, fantasy and delusion walked Samuel Johnson. At the time, Boswell recorded ...
... Boswell's original sense of Johnson's disagreeableness into the milder emotion of nonplussed embarrassment. But it ... Boswell's reference to Hamlet was apt to his own case – in addition, of course, (and this is once again ...
... Boswell's friendship. It was also the seed of Boswell's Life of Johnson, and it is therefore appropriate that Boswell should have folded into his account of that primal scene a reference to the book which would result from it, when he ...