Misplaced Pages

Elegy for Iris

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Elegy for Iris" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Elegy for Iris is a 1999 memoir by John Bayley. In it, he recounts his forty-two year marriage to fellow author Iris Murdoch and her struggles with Alzheimer's disease in the last years of her life. It is a companion book to Bayley's other works about Murdoch: Iris and Her Friends and Widower's House.

For The New York Times, Mary Gordon wrote that Bayley's narrative is "a continuing act of heroic love, but the heroism plays itself out in a register that is unfamiliar to contemporary audiences, particularly American ones. Its dominant notes are humility, modesty, patience and humor. The heroism is all the more admirable for its reluctance to acknowledge that heroism might be defined in such terms."

The 2001 film Iris is inspired by Elegy for Iris, focusing on the beginning and ending of Bayley and Murdoch's lives together.

First edition

References

  1. "Iris and John". archive.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
  2. Bradshaw, Peter (2002-01-18). "Iris review". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-02-22.

Further reading


Stub icon

This article about a biographical book on writers or poets is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: