Samuel Beckett (1906-1989) alcanzó renombre universal a raíz de recibir el Premio Nobel de literatura el año 1969. Poeta y novelista, su fama procede sobre todo del campo teatral, donde obras como Esperando a Godot marcan un punto de referencia insoslayable en la cultura del siglo XX.
Nice to get some sense of Beckett's life in Paris, friends, food, books, late nights, those he liked, those he didn't, life with his nephew, his enormous generosity, why he was 'damned to fame'. This and the Knowlson biography (and others) uncover the non-public artist. Beckett seemed more at home working in his garden. Which makes sense. The collection of letters, notes, random memories, philosophical musings, writerly references and quotes and everything that adds up to something but, as with everything Beckett, comes to nothing (well, something that's nothing). Nice, also, to see Beckett's relationship with Avigdor Arika and Anne Atik and their daughters. Such intelligent but modest, authentic people thriving on each other's company.
Interesting book, I knew almost nothing of Samuel Beckett as a person. I thought of him as an austere intellectual figure. This short book humanizes him to an extent. It also gives a glimpse into the lives of people who discuss art, music, literature on a daily basis, as an integral part of their lives.
The most interesting parts are when Beckett talks about Samuel Johnson, Shakespeare, Keats and gives book recommendations. His love of Johnson is total and it made me smile reading about it. I think the discussion of Beckett as a saint is pretty ridiculous. He was obviously a kind person, let's leave it at that. But the fact that him and Welles didn't talk (the Johnson of the 20th century) is a shame and a pity.
Written by some one close to Beckett and who cared about him. Her book reveals the private person that Beckett was with his friends. I've discovered this sort of book helps me understand an author much better than the usual biographical pieces. And that in turn adds much more to reading of the author's works.
Atik is clear and bright in her brief sketches; her portrayal of Sam Beckett lucid, sympathetic, and intimate. Each letter mentioned is reproduced in facsimile and other attending pictures give imagistic persuasion to the story described of a kind and generous man.