Henry Miller's People
Insights in the Human Character
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Narrado por:
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Ryan Mitchell
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De:
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Henry Miller
The famous and the obscure are illuminated under the penetrating, sometimes jaundiced eyes of author Henry Miller.
Henry Miller's gifts of profundity, humor, and spiritual sensitivity are well displayed in this collection of insights into the human character. The pieces range from the delightfully raucous to the metaphysically illuminating.
The pieces range from the delightfully raucous to the metaphysically illuminating. Included here are mini-portraits of the renowned—Swiss astrologer Conrad Moricand, collage artist Jean Varda, Swiss-French novelist Blaise Cendrars, and American painter Beauford Delaney—as well as the anonymous figures who crossed Miller's path, including his first high school romance; a prostitute named Mademoiselle Claude; Miller's alcoholic, philandering Uncle Harry; and a murderer that Miller dubs "Bud Clausen."
Thanks to Miller's penetrating prose, all of these figures become real to the listener, even 19th century poet What Whitman. This recording contains material that may offend some listeners. Listener discretion is advised.
©1992 Henry Miller (P)1992 Phoenix BooksLos oyentes también disfrutaron:
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The recording is mumbled and difficult to understand.
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The program is a collection of essays and excerpts from longer works by Miller describing people he knew or friendships he had, usually with a lot of over-the-top praise. It's the most positive aspects of Miller that are on display here, though it must be said that some of the ways he puts things and some of his attitudes about women and race and nationality are not anything I can endorse. He had prejudices that were complicated by the fact that he also held opposite views simultaneously, in most instances, which develops over the course of longer works, and the complexity of his attitudes are not always evident from these brief excerpts. Still, for a guy born in 1891 he seems positively progressive for his age on these points, and it is mostly Miller the metaphysical seeker and keen observer of human joys and foibles that is on display here.
The reader is basically perfect for the material and it is largely his voice that has continued to draw me back to this particular program over the years. The one small point that I've taken a star off for, is that when French phrases come up, as they routinely do, his pronunciation is way, way, WAY off, enough that I sometimes have to pause the program and repeat the sounds he made in order to figure out what the French he was looking at must have been. It's basically first-year stuff, so I don't really understand why he didn't get guidance on these passages, especially since he reads them so dramatically, his pronunciation makes it almost comical. On the other hand, Miller was fluent in French but notoriously spoke it with a thick Brooklyn accent, so maybe the terrible elocution was purposeful. And of course, if you don't speak French at all, this will not bother you.
Great program overall and thank you again for bringing it back to the world!
Excellent collection of Miller essays
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Human, utterly human... Pure Miller!
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