John Erskine
(New York, 1879-1951) American writer.A unique researcher, man of letters, university professor, novelist and pianist of great quality, John Erskine was a professor at Amherst and Columbia University (there, as "professor emeritus"), author of critical texts, editor of anthologies and histories of literature, and soloist of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra.
John Erskine
He began his narrative work in 1925, with The private life of Helen of Troy , a new version , erudite, brilliant and humorous, of the legend underlying contemporary reality that obtained extraordinary success, and which was followed by a large series of analogous novels, among which stood out Galahad Enough of His Life to Explain His Reputation (1926), Adam and Eve (1927) and Penelope's Man (1928).
John Erskine also contributed a chapter to a crime novel written by several authors, based on an original idea by Franklin D.Roosevelt, The President's Mystery Plot (1935).He also wrote a history of the Philharmonic Symphony Society of New York, directed the Metropolitan Opera Association, and was president of the Poetry Society of America.
Comments
Post a Comment