Iris Murdoch: A Life

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W. W. Norton & Company, 2001 - Biography & Autobiography - 706 pages
In "Iris Murdoch," Peter Conradi assesses the remarkable intellectual and cultural legacy of the celebrated philosopher and beloved novelist. Depicting her personal life in extraordinary detail -- her student days at Oxford, her Communist activities, her early affairs, and her enduring marriage to John Bayley -- he also deftly interprets her philosophical works and twenty-six novels with brilliant clarity and insight. Murdoch emerges as a writer who in her early years imagined herself as the heir to George Eliot but later found a kinship with Dostoevsky's fantastic realism, his obsessions with sadomasochism, and his philosophical fascination with moral anarchy. Relying on ninety-five hitherto unseen diaries, hundreds of interviews, and thousands of letters, Conradi has written a riveting biography that is as much an absorbing history of literary England from 1940 to the present as it is a vivid depiction of one of our greatest twentieth-century writers.

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Contents

I
1
II
3
III
33
IV
57
V
82
VI
109
VII
135
VIII
164
XVII
376
XIX
407
XX
409
XXI
437
XXII
467
XXIII
497
XXIV
527
XXVI
551

IX
197
X
199
XI
231
XII
261
XIV
288
XV
317
XVI
345
XXVIII
586
XXIX
595
XXX
599
XXXI
661
XXXII
677
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About the author (2001)

Peter J. Conradi is coexecutor of Murdoch's literary estate. He lives in London.

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