Evelyn Waugh
Recommended reading: Reading Rat
Study Guide: A Companion to Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited, British Edition, by David Cliffe
Reference:
Doubting Hall: A guided tour around the works of Evelyn Waugh, by John Porter
An Evelyn Waugh Website, by David Cliffe
Evelyn Wood by Petri Liukkonen, Authors' Calendar
Criticism (articles, essays, reviews):
Waugh Stories by Joan Acocella, review of Fathers and Sons by Alexander Waugh, The New Yorker, July 2, 2007
(via Video meliora, proboque; Deteriora sequor)
Why I love Evelyn Waugh, Posted by Pertinacious Papist at 10:28 AM March 4, 2007
When the Going Was Bad, review by David B. Hart of Waugh Abroad: Collected Travel Writing, by Evelyn Waugh, First Things, May 2004
A Literary Revolution, by Gerald J. Russello, review of The Catholic Revival in English Literature, 1845-1961: Newman, Hopkins, Belloc, Chesterton, Greene, Waugh, by Ian Ker, Crisis, April 2004
Fathers, sons, feuds and myths, interview by Sam Leith of Alexander Waugh, Daily Telegraph, January 9, 2004
Waugh: What is he good for? Absolutely everything, by Brian Mortan, The Scotsman, October 28, 2003
Oh what a lovely Waugh, by Owen Richardson, The Age, October 26, 2003
Evelyn Waugh topples charlatans from their pedestals, by Gerald Warner, The Scotsman, October 26, 2003
The spoils of Waugh: on the essence of Evelyn Waugh, the anniversary of whose birth falls next week, by W.F. Deedes, The Spectator, October 25, 2003
Literary Scamp Evelyn Waugh by Arthur Jones, Notre Dame Magazine, Autumn 2003
Evelyn Waugh, Reconsidered, by Judith Shulevitz and Christopher Caldwell, Salon, August 5, 2003
Reading Africa in Waugh: What Evelyn Waugh can tell us about contemporary Africa, by James Panero, The New Criterion, Summer 2003
Behind the pose: A hundred years after the birth of Evelyn Waugh, we need to get beyond his elaborate persona and focus on the fiction, by William Boyd, The Telegraph, May 10, 2003
The Satirist of the Fall, by F.H. Buckley, Crisis, January 2003
Evelyn Waugh: Author Evelyn Waugh served honorably in the British Army as an SAS Commando, by Paul S. Burdett, Jr., World War II Magazine, May 1999, at About.com
Waugh Revisited, by Kenneth R. Craycraft Jr., First Things, June/July 1998
St. Evelyn Waugh, by George Weigel, First Things, May 1993
Evelyn Waugh, by Joseph Pearce, Lay Witness magazine
Study Guide: A Companion to Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited, British Edition, by David Cliffe
Reference:
Doubting Hall: A guided tour around the works of Evelyn Waugh, by John Porter
An Evelyn Waugh Website, by David Cliffe
Evelyn Wood by Petri Liukkonen, Authors' Calendar
Criticism (articles, essays, reviews):
Waugh Stories by Joan Acocella, review of Fathers and Sons by Alexander Waugh, The New Yorker, July 2, 2007
(via Video meliora, proboque; Deteriora sequor)
Why I love Evelyn Waugh, Posted by Pertinacious Papist at 10:28 AM March 4, 2007
When the Going Was Bad, review by David B. Hart of Waugh Abroad: Collected Travel Writing, by Evelyn Waugh, First Things, May 2004
A Literary Revolution, by Gerald J. Russello, review of The Catholic Revival in English Literature, 1845-1961: Newman, Hopkins, Belloc, Chesterton, Greene, Waugh, by Ian Ker, Crisis, April 2004
Fathers, sons, feuds and myths, interview by Sam Leith of Alexander Waugh, Daily Telegraph, January 9, 2004
Waugh: What is he good for? Absolutely everything, by Brian Mortan, The Scotsman, October 28, 2003
Oh what a lovely Waugh, by Owen Richardson, The Age, October 26, 2003
Evelyn Waugh topples charlatans from their pedestals, by Gerald Warner, The Scotsman, October 26, 2003
The spoils of Waugh: on the essence of Evelyn Waugh, the anniversary of whose birth falls next week, by W.F. Deedes, The Spectator, October 25, 2003
Literary Scamp Evelyn Waugh by Arthur Jones, Notre Dame Magazine, Autumn 2003
Evelyn Waugh, Reconsidered, by Judith Shulevitz and Christopher Caldwell, Salon, August 5, 2003
Reading Africa in Waugh: What Evelyn Waugh can tell us about contemporary Africa, by James Panero, The New Criterion, Summer 2003
Behind the pose: A hundred years after the birth of Evelyn Waugh, we need to get beyond his elaborate persona and focus on the fiction, by William Boyd, The Telegraph, May 10, 2003
The Satirist of the Fall, by F.H. Buckley, Crisis, January 2003
Evelyn Waugh: Author Evelyn Waugh served honorably in the British Army as an SAS Commando, by Paul S. Burdett, Jr., World War II Magazine, May 1999, at About.com
Waugh Revisited, by Kenneth R. Craycraft Jr., First Things, June/July 1998
St. Evelyn Waugh, by George Weigel, First Things, May 1993
Evelyn Waugh, by Joseph Pearce, Lay Witness magazine


0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home