David Gross, 'Historical Consciousness and the Modern Novel: The Uses of History in the Fiction of John Fowles', Studies in the Humanities, 7.1 (1978), pp. 19–27. Constance B. Hieatt, 'Eliduc Revisited: John Fowles and Marie de France', ...
Analyzes the novels of the British writer, looks at how they make use of genre conventions, and assess Fowles place in modern literature
He is author of John Fowles and Samuel Beckett's Artistic Theory and Practice, and is either editor or co-editor of Samuel Beckett's Later Fiction and Drama: Texts for Company; The British and Irish Novel Since 1960; British and Irish ...
By including such multiple points of view, Fowles interrogates the concept of objectivity, suggesting that all perspectives reflect group ... 9 Carlin Romano, “A Conversation with John Fowles”, in Conversations with John Fowles, ed.
As a 'magpie', with extremely eclectic tastes in reading, Fowles nonetheless exhibits criteria within his own choices ... John Fowles, quoted by Daniel Halpern, in 'A Sort of Exile in Lyme Regis' (1971), rpt. in Conversations with John ...
This volume will be of interest to critics and readers of contemporary fiction, but most of all, to men and women who seek a progressive, inclusive feminism.
"This study divides John Fowles's work into three chronological phases, making sense of his development as a novelist, essayist and thinker. As well as discussing Fowles in the light of...
John Fowles has been compared to Henry James and Virginia Woolf. Christopher Lehmann-Haupt in The New York Timeshailed him as “a remarkable novelist,” and the novelist John Gardner described him...
Conradi sees him as both realist and experimental, and in detailed analyses of The Magus and The French Lieutenant’s Woman illuminates Fowles’s use of literary genres – the romance (in particular), the detective story, the thriller, ...
John Fowles
John Fowles
By the 1970s, however, Fowles' interest in existentialism had begun to wane, his disillusionment taking different forms in The Ebony Tower, a collection of short stories, and in Daniel Martin, the novel that followed it.
The French Lieutenant's Woman, The Magus, A MaggotIn Vintage Living Texts, teachers and students will find the essential guide to the works of John Fowles. Vintage Living Texts is unique...
John Fowles, best known as the author of The French Lieutenant's Woman, has also written numerous other works--fiction as well as nonfiction. This unique reference book by James R. Aubrey lists all of Fowles's writings for the first time.