Letters
Letters | March 2008
by Richard Walsh, Ian Britain, Elisabeth Holdsworth •
Defending Darleen Bungey
Dear Editor,
To write the biography of an artist as prolific and complex as Arthur Boyd is an ambitious undertaking, as Ian Britain notes in his review of Darleen Bungey’s account (February 2008). Her book took seven years to research and write; it underwent considerable peer review.
As its commissioning editor, I was delighted by Bungey’s highly original, imaginative and evocative prose. If Britain prefers, as he states, ‘the austerities of Franz Philipp’s seminal study ... Janet McKenzie’s beautifully economical monograph ... the poised, elegant restraint of Brenda Niall’, then he is so patently lacking in sympathy with this endeavour that he is unlikely to be fair to its author. And he isn’t.
From the New Issue
Letters
A Life in Letters: A new light on Simone Weil by Robert Chevanier and André A. Devaux, translated from French by Nicholas Elliott
by Scott Stephens
Classics
The Odyssey: A mesmerising guide to Odysseus’s world by Homer, translated from ancient Greek by Daniel Mendelsohn
by Glyn Davis
Gender
What Is Wrong with Men by Jessa Crispin & The Male Complaint by Simon James Copland
by Tom Ryan
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