"We are reading your book with great pleasure and are much impressed by the depth and breadth of your research and the acuteness of your judgement. What strikes us most is the warmth and sympathy of your approach – your love for Penelope's work is so clear."
— Terence Dooley, Penelope Fitzgerald's literary executor and son-in-law.
"Happy is the writer who possesses such great aesthetic qualities and such intrinsic values, without any desire for worldly goods. These are the well-deserved rewards in life."
— Prof. Dr. Mehmet Özcan, Mehmet Akif Ersoy University.
"Penelope Fitzgerald's admirable life and works are presented by Yeşim Sultan Yaşar in a clear, thorough, and gentle manner through the prism of self-actualisation. This book provides perceptive insights into the struggles with adversity undertaken by Fitzgerald's characters and by Fitzgerald herself, demonstrating why Penelope Fitzgerald is an increasingly popular author."
— Assoc. Prof. Dr. Philip George Anthony Glover, Süleyman Demirel University.
"I so enjoyed reading this fascinating book and remain grateful that Yeşim Sultan introduced me to Penelope Fitzgerald. Her discussion of one writer's life, intertwined with psychological insights and I'm grateful to see how relevant Maslow remains, even as we notice how American and Western his take can be. As an older writer myself, I truly applaud Yeşim Sultan's celebration of Fitzgerald's fortitude and persistence. Women often find themselves postponing their creative pursuits as they care for children, homes, and partners. Yeşim Sultan honours both the early sparks and the late flowering of Fitzgerald's genius the 'underground river' that surfaces in thirteen books in twenty years and focuses on the author's process of self-actualization rather than only on her characters. In a world that idolizes youth, this book reminds us of the great wisdom older women can offer, particularly from this one writer who reached her own self-actualization late in life. Yeşim Sultan Yaşar has written a profoundly insightful and fascinating study of one of England's greatest writers, a work that will be a terrific resource for both academics and general readers."
— Donna Baier Stein, author and founding publisher of Tiferet Journal.
Having read Penelope Fitzgerald's life and oeuvre in their entirety, one comes to realise that she does not simply remain an author on the page; she becomes a haunting presence. To encounter Fitzgerald is to welcome into one's intellectual and emotional life a writer born into an extraordinary family shaped by learning, wit, and moral imagination who inherited the finest legacies of her father and uncles and transformed them into a voice unmistakably her own: "immensely civilized knowledgeable, erudite, cultivated, witty […] serious and intellectually graceful."
Yet this book argues that Fitzgerald's achievement cannot be understood solely through lineage or literary inheritance. Writing late, quietly, and often against expectation, she forged a body of work marked by restraint, resilience, and an ethics of attention. Her fiction and non-fiction alike reveal a profound engagement with loss, failure, ageing, faith, and perseverance rendered not through grand declarations but through subtle shifts of tone, silence, and form.
Blending biography, literary criticism, and life-writing studies, this book offers a sustained reading of Penelope Fitzgerald as a writer of late style and moral precision. It reconsiders creativity beyond youth, success, or visibility, and invites readers to listen closely to a voice that gently but firmly insists on the enduring power of intelligence, humility, and grace.
"We are reading your book with great pleasure and are much impressed by the depth and breadth of your research and the acuteness of your judgement. What strikes us most is the warmth and sympathy of your approach – your love for Penelope's work is so clear."
— Terence Dooley, Penelope Fitzgerald's literary executor and son-in-law.
"Happy is the writer who possesses such great aesthetic qualities and such intrinsic values, without any desire for worldly goods. These are the well-deserved rewards in life."
— Prof. Dr. Mehmet Özcan, Mehmet Akif Ersoy University.
"Penelope Fitzgerald's admirable life and works are presented by Yeşim Sultan Yaşar in a clear, thorough, and gentle manner through the prism of self-actualisation. This book provides perceptive insights into the struggles with adversity undertaken by Fitzgerald's characters and by Fitzgerald herself, demonstrating why Penelope Fitzgerald is an increasingly popular author."
— Assoc. Prof. Dr. Philip George Anthony Glover, Süleyman Demirel University.
"I so enjoyed reading this fascinating book and remain grateful that Yeşim Sultan introduced me to Penelope Fitzgerald. Her discussion of one writer's life, intertwined with psychological insights and I'm grateful to see how relevant Maslow remains, even as we notice how American and Western his take can be. As an older writer myself, I truly applaud Yeşim Sultan's celebration of Fitzgerald's fortitude and persistence. Women often find themselves postponing their creative pursuits as they care for children, homes, and partners. Yeşim Sultan honours both the early sparks and the late flowering of Fitzgerald's genius the 'underground river' that surfaces in thirteen books in twenty years and focuses on the author's process of self-actualization rather than only on her characters. In a world that idolizes youth, this book reminds us of the great wisdom older women can offer, particularly from this one writer who reached her own self-actualization late in life. Yeşim Sultan Yaşar has written a profoundly insightful and fascinating study of one of England's greatest writers, a work that will be a terrific resource for both academics and general readers."
— Donna Baier Stein, author and founding publisher of Tiferet Journal.
Having read Penelope Fitzgerald's life and oeuvre in their entirety, one comes to realise that she does not simply remain an author on the page; she becomes a haunting presence. To encounter Fitzgerald is to welcome into one's intellectual and emotional life a writer born into an extraordinary family shaped by learning, wit, and moral imagination who inherited the finest legacies of her father and uncles and transformed them into a voice unmistakably her own: "immensely civilized knowledgeable, erudite, cultivated, witty […] serious and intellectually graceful."
Yet this book argues that Fitzgerald's achievement cannot be understood solely through lineage or literary inheritance. Writing late, quietly, and often against expectation, she forged a body of work marked by restraint, resilience, and an ethics of attention. Her fiction and non-fiction alike reveal a profound engagement with loss, failure, ageing, faith, and perseverance rendered not through grand declarations but through subtle shifts of tone, silence, and form.
Blending biography, literary criticism, and life-writing studies, this book offers a sustained reading of Penelope Fitzgerald as a writer of late style and moral precision. It reconsiders creativity beyond youth, success, or visibility, and invites readers to listen closely to a voice that gently but firmly insists on the enduring power of intelligence, humility, and grace.
| Taksit Sayısı | Taksit tutarı | Genel Toplam |
|---|---|---|
| Tek Çekim | 280,00 | 280,00 |
| 2 | 145,60 | 291,20 |
| 3 | 100,80 | 302,40 |
| Taksit Sayısı | Taksit tutarı | Genel Toplam |
|---|---|---|
| Tek Çekim | 280,00 | 280,00 |
| 2 | 145,60 | 291,20 |
| 3 | 100,80 | 302,40 |