Pentimento: A Book Of Portraits

Pentimento: A Book Of Portraits

$80.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Tullamarine warehouse

Condition: SECONDHAND

This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.


Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Chipped and worn with some minor damage
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings

A landmark work of literary memoir, Pentimento: A Book of Portraits presents a series of vivid, intimate sketches drawn from playwright Lillian Hellman's remarkable life, each one revisiting a person or moment from her past with the honesty and precision of an artist correcting an old canvas. The title itself — borrowed from the painting term for an image that bleeds through layers of paint — frames the entire work as an act of memory and revision, acknowledging that what we once saw and what we now understand are rarely the same thing. With a tone that is by turns wry, tender, and unflinching, Hellman chronicles figures ranging from a childhood friend to the legendary Julia, whose story of wartime resistance became one of the most celebrated and debated portraits in the collection. The prose carries the authority of a seasoned dramatist, each portrait constructed with the economy and emotional weight of a well-crafted scene. Widely regarded as one of the finest examples of American memoir writing, it stands as a testament to the power of retrospection and the courage required to tell the truth about the people who shaped a life.

Author: Lillian Hellman
Format: Hardback
Published: 1974, Macmillan
Genre: Biography

Description


Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Chipped and worn with some minor damage
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings

A landmark work of literary memoir, Pentimento: A Book of Portraits presents a series of vivid, intimate sketches drawn from playwright Lillian Hellman's remarkable life, each one revisiting a person or moment from her past with the honesty and precision of an artist correcting an old canvas. The title itself — borrowed from the painting term for an image that bleeds through layers of paint — frames the entire work as an act of memory and revision, acknowledging that what we once saw and what we now understand are rarely the same thing. With a tone that is by turns wry, tender, and unflinching, Hellman chronicles figures ranging from a childhood friend to the legendary Julia, whose story of wartime resistance became one of the most celebrated and debated portraits in the collection. The prose carries the authority of a seasoned dramatist, each portrait constructed with the economy and emotional weight of a well-crafted scene. Widely regarded as one of the finest examples of American memoir writing, it stands as a testament to the power of retrospection and the courage required to tell the truth about the people who shaped a life.