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John Peale Bishop

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Name
  
John Bishop

Role
  
Poet


John Peale Bishop appics2gotpoemcomappicsuser4914387bigjpg

Died
  
April 4, 1944, Hyannis, Massachusetts, United States

Books
  
Act of Darkness, The undertaker's garland

Similar People
  
Edmund Wilson, Allen Tate, Clyde Kluckhohn

Speaking of poetry by john peale bishop


John Peale Bishop (May 21, 1892 – April 4, 1944) was an American poet and man of letters.

Contents

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John peale bishop pt 1 by jim surkamp jimsurkamp com


Biography

John Peale Bishop John Peale Bishop Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Bishop was born in Charles Town, West Virginia, to a family from New England, and attended school in Hagerstown, Maryland and Mercersburg Academy. At 18, Bishop fell victim to a severe illness and temporarily lost his sight for some time. He entered Princeton University in 1913, at age 21, where he became friends with Edmund Wilson and F. Scott Fitzgerald. He graduated from Princeton in 1917 and served with the army for two years in Europe. He was the model for the character Thomas Parke D'Invilliers in Fitzgerald's first novel, This Side of Paradise.

John Peale Bishop BISHOP JOHN PEALE Class of 1917 18921944 Rare Books and

Upon returning to the United States, he wrote poetry as well as essays and reviews for Vanity Fair in New York City. In 1922 he married Margaret Hutchins, and they soon moved to France, where they lived until 1933, punctuated by one stint for Paramount Pictures in New York (1925–26). While in France they bought the Château de Tressancourt at Orgeval, Seine et Oise, near Paris, where they raised three sons.

John Peale Bishop 21 March 1925 F Scott Fitzgerald to John Peale Bishop The

In 1933 Bishop's family returned to the United States, residing first in Connecticut, then New Orleans, and finally in a house on Cape Cod. His novel Act of Darkness, based on the true story of the rape of a prominent Charles Town social figure by a local Charles Town man, caused a scandal in the town when it was published.

John Peale Bishop John Peale bishop In the Dordogne

He became chief poetry reviewer for The Nation (1940). In 1941-2 he served as publications director in the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs, and was then invited to be resident fellow at the Library of Congress. He died within a few months of his appointment, on April 4, 1944, in Hyannis, Massachusetts.

Selected works

  • Green Fruit, poetry, 1917
  • The Undertaker’s Garland, with Edmund Wilson, decorations by Boris Artzybasheff, poetry, 1922
  • Many Thousands Gone, short stories, 1931
  • Now With His Love, poetry, 1933
  • Act of Darkness, novel, 1935
  • Minute Particulars, poetry, 1935
  • Selected Poems, 1941
  • The Collected Essays of John Peale Bishop, posthumous, 1948
  • The Republic of Letters in America, posthumous collection of letters with Allen Tate, 1981
  • References

    John Peale Bishop Wikipedia