Home
Galahad and I Thought of Daisy
Barnes and Noble
Galahad and I Thought of Daisy
Current price: $27.00


Barnes and Noble
Galahad and I Thought of Daisy
Current price: $27.00
Size: Paperback
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
From one of the leading literary critics of his generation comes the first of Edmund Wilson's three novels,
I thought of Daisy
, published together with his short story "Galahad."
Set in Greenwich Village in the 1920s, Edmund Wilson’s
I Thought of Daisy
tells the coming of age story of a young man living a bohemian life in Greenwich Village in the 1920s, and of his heartfelt relationship with a chorus girl he meets at a party. Fictional sketches drawn from real-life literary figures are scattered throughout, including John Dos Passos and Wilson's lover, Edna St. Vincent Millay.
"What needs to be [said] is how good, if ungainly,
Daisy
is, how charmingly and intelligently she tells of the speakeasy days of a Greenwich Village as red and cozy as a valentine, of lamplit islands where love and ambition and drunkenness bloomed all at once. The fiction writer in Wilson was real, and his displacement is a real loss." - John Updike
I thought of Daisy
, published together with his short story "Galahad."
Set in Greenwich Village in the 1920s, Edmund Wilson’s
I Thought of Daisy
tells the coming of age story of a young man living a bohemian life in Greenwich Village in the 1920s, and of his heartfelt relationship with a chorus girl he meets at a party. Fictional sketches drawn from real-life literary figures are scattered throughout, including John Dos Passos and Wilson's lover, Edna St. Vincent Millay.
"What needs to be [said] is how good, if ungainly,
Daisy
is, how charmingly and intelligently she tells of the speakeasy days of a Greenwich Village as red and cozy as a valentine, of lamplit islands where love and ambition and drunkenness bloomed all at once. The fiction writer in Wilson was real, and his displacement is a real loss." - John Updike