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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
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English
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SEMPRE SUSAN

Sigrid Nunez

Sigrid Nunez was a young writer new to the New York literary world when she met Susan Sontag, already a legendary figure known for her polemical essays, her blindingly bright intelligence, and her edgy personal style. A magnetic presence, intimidating and blunt, Sontag established herself as the main interpreter of the avant-garde with Against Interpretation the book, claims Nunez, that made her want to become a writer.
"There could be no nobler pursuit, no greater adventure, no more rewarding quest." Her memoir, at once piercing and deeply empathic, gives a sharp sense of the charged, polarizing atmosphere that enveloped Sontag whenever she published a book, gave a lecture, or simply walked into a room. Published six years after the author's death, Sempre Susan is a startlingly truthful portrait of this outsized personality, who, through sheer force of will, made being an intellectual a glamorous occupation. "She was so New York," writes Nunez. She sustained herself on opera, ballet, avant-garde films; her friends and lovers - the Russian poet Joseph Brodsky, the critic Elizabeth Hardwick, the publisher Roger Straus - were among the most interesting people in the city.

Nunez's nuanced portrait of Sontag is both respectful and intimate. She shows us a writer's day-to-day life - living on Campbell's soup, writing her most famous essays on a regimen of cigarettes and dexedrine, knocking on the author's door late at night to share the details of a party. Sontag lived for literature; she had read with urgent avidity the thousands of books in her library. But she hated the writer's solitary life, and could never stand to be alone. A novelist and controversial filmmaker as well as an essayist, she yearned to be recognized not only as a critic but as an artist. In a sense, her greatest work of art was her life.

When she died of cancer at the age of 71 (having miraculously survived a first bout in her early 40s that inspired her celebrated essay, Illness as Metaphor), her death hit hard. "She was a vital presence, and that she should have been felled in this way is very disturbing," Nunez quotes the friend who brought her the news. The author of five critically acclaimed novels - her most recent, Salvation City, was praised in the New York Times Book Review as "a satisfying, provocative, and very powerful novel" - has producd a masterly character portrait reminiscent of James Lord on Giacometti and Shirley Hazzard on Graham Greene. The novelist and biographer Edmund White calls Sempre Susan "the best thing written on Sontag."
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Book

Published 2014-10-07 by Riverhead

Book

Published 2014-10-07 by Riverhead

Comments

Nunez has constructed a eulogy that mythologizes and humanizes one of the most intimidating figures of contemporary culture.

This detailed, nuanced account of the more private side of a complex, contradictory public figure is told with even-handed good humor and more than a little compassion. Utterly absorbing.

When Susan Sontag, 43, needed help catching up with correspondence in the wake of a radical mastectomy in 1976, friends suggested Nunez, then a 25-year-old writer wannabe, now an acclaimed novelist. Sontag was avid about sharing her knowledge, enthusiasms, and even her adored son, David Rieff, with Nunez, who ended up moving in. Now, six years after Sontag's death, Nunez chronicles those heady and unnerving times in a boldly intimate, stingingly frank, and genuinely fascinating memoir... Sontag averred that getting to know famous writers can be disappointing, but there is nothing diminishing about this up-close-and-personal account of one interlude in Sontag's remarkable life of blazing literary accomplishment, activism, and valor. And Nunez herself is intriguing. Readers of this thorny remembrance will hope that Nunez tells her own story next time.

Chinese (simpl): Beijing Curiosity Culture and Technology ; Spanish: Errata Naturae ; Turkish: Kafka Kitap

Nunez's book is an elegy for a great woman and the company she kept, the vanished salon where she was the center.

'Looking back,' Nunez writes, 'I only wish that I could feel more joy - or, at least, that I could find a way of remembering that is not so painful.' For the reader, if not for herself, she has.

The iconoclasm of the fearless intellectual Susan Sontag... continues with novelist Nunez's thorny remembrance of the woman who was her literary mentor as well as her boyfriend's mother... What emerges from this conflicted portrait is a vulnerable woman recovering from illness who could not be alone; Sontag was supercilious, insecure, yet vulnerable to beauty and love, fiercely uncompromising, and surely, as Nunez intimates by the end, the finest teacher a young writer could ever have had.

Graceful, respectful and achingly honest.

Nunez, an uncompromising talent in her own right, offers the most vibrant and multifaceted portrait of Sontag to date.

Sempre Susan is written with quiet authority, flashes of poetry, and a steady accumulation of startling, precise details, some apocryphal (Sontag didn't know what a dragonfly was? drank blood as a child?), until by the end Sontag the Myth comes to life. What is amazing about this wonderful book is that by the end we know as much about Nunez as we do about Sontag, by the very focus of her attention, by her perception of the myth, by her compassionate interpretation.

Sigrid Nunez's intimate portrayal of Susan Sontag will fascinate both ardent Sontag fans and those who have never read her work. This memoir is at once a window into the writing life in general, an examination of the complexities of one artist in particular, and a tribute to the lost intellectual New York City of the 1970s. Remarkably, it's as honest as it is affectionate and as sad as it is charming.