Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Golding, William (Vol. 17) - Mary Renault
Golding, William (Vol. 17) - Mary Renault
MARY RENAULT
Amid a literary world dedicated to debating, reporting, or re-editing the effects of the human condition, William Golding on his lonely eminence continues to ponder its cause…. For others the private language, the prestige narcissist obscurantism; he must take up the archaic challenge of the artist, to make known, to attempt communication, and be seen to succeed or fail—a heroism so rare today as to seem almost quixotic. Mr. Golding communicates. His sayings are hard, but no harder than the thought contained in them; he speaks in parables, but they sharpen not fuzz the meaning. His subject is tremendous: man's first disobedience, and the fruit….
[In] "Free Fall" hell is harrowed, the rescued sinner pays the hard redemptive price of self-knowledge; the tissues of the spirit, healed and living, have become capable of pain.
Sammy Mountjoy, a painter and war artist, is in a Nazi prisoner-of-war camp…. He is promised torture, then...
[The entire page is 418 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Louis J. Halle
- James Stern
- John Peter
- Norman Podhoretz
- V. S. Pritchett
- Frank Kermode
- Mary Renault
- Peter Green
- C. B. Cox
- Michael Quinn
- Terry Southern
- Frank J. Warnke
- V. S. Pritchett
- Nigel Dennis
- Frank Kermode
- William Barrett
- R. C. Townsend
- Gladys Veidemanis
- James R. Baker
- Christopher Ricks
- J. D. O'Hara
- Harry H. Taylor
- D. W. Crompton
- Roderick Nordell
- David Spitz
- Stanley Cook
- James R. Baker
- P. N. Furbank
- A. C. Capey
- James Acheson
- Ronald Blythe
- Paul Ableman
- John Calvin Batchelor
- Joyce Carol Oates
- Copyright
