Media Reviews
Murdoch belonged to a generation and class for whom the handwritten letter was as necessary as breathing... Although Murdoch destroyed many of her letters and journals and may well have instructed her correspondents to do the same, a mountain survives. The selection Horner and Rowe have made offers insight into many corners of her life and work. --John Sutherland, New York Times Book Review Spanning six decades, and encompassing dozens of recipients, this collection of [Murdoch's] letters provides a lens through which to view many events in her life... The letters touch on many weighty intellectual topics, and they are equally remarkable for their candor... [E]ngrossing and frequently moving. --Publishers Weekly Perhaps the best thing about Living on Paper is the portrait of Murdoch that emerges. --Becca Rothfeld, The Nation An intimate view of the prolific British novelist and philosopher... With their deep knowledge of Murdoch's life and work, the editors have produced an authoritative, readable, and informative volume that contextualizes the writer's vibrant, intense, and sometimes slyly witty correspondence... An impressively edited, sharply revealing life in letters. --Kirkus, starred review [A]n unprecedented exposure of the heart and mind of a major novelist and thinker (the author of 26 novels and three major works of philosophy) and a woman who lived a life of unusual intellectual and personal freedom. --Ann Chisholm, Prospect [A] compulsively readable volume. --Daniel Johnson, Standpoint [A] treasure trove... Living on Paper is presented in chronological sections, each helpfully introduced by Rowe and Horner, who set the scene for Murdoch's life at that time; her writing, her passions, her whereabouts. The letters are fervent, philosophical, frenetic and witty; they suggest sources, from her own life, for the varied portraits of obsessive desire in her novels. --Rivka Isaacson, The Independent 'I am an indefatigable letter writer', Iris Murdoch wrote to a friend in 1968. 'I am pretty good at conversation by letter'. A new, insightful book, Living on Paper: Letters from Iris Murdoch 1934-1995 testifies that she was right on both counts. --Malcolm Forbes, The National Living on Paper, the first major collection of Murdoch's correspondence, is a dense inventory of her passions and affairs... Anyone who misses the regular appearance of new Murdoch novels will find plenty to enjoy and admire in these letters. They pitch us back into her cerebral yet vaguely surreal and magical intellectual world. Her mind, here as in everything she wrote, is formidable. --Dwight Garner, New York Times Intimate, learned, generous, stern and flirtatious... [Living on Paper] begins when [Iris Murdoch] is 15 ... and ends, heart-wrenchingly, with her struggling through Alzheimer's to write a valued friend... In between is an epic, epistolary 20th-century adventure. --Nicholas Kohler, Maclean's [C]hatty, friendly letters, full of warmth. --Robert Fulford, National Post Readers come closer to Iris Murdoch--the writer, the friend, the lover, the person--than either Peter Conradi's official biography or [John] Bayley's memoirs allowed... It's this Iris Murdoch--compulsively discursive, doggedly happy--who dominates Living on Paper and fills it with the kind of smart, nimble-footed small talk that is always the principal joy of reading letter collections. --Steve Donoghue, Christian Science Monitor Living on Paper is a revelatory and exquisitely insightful read in its totality, brimming with Murdoch's uncommon sincerity and shrewdness. --Maria Popova, Brain Pickings Avril Horner ... and Anne Rowe ... allow Murdoch, who struggled with Alzheimer's in the 1990s, to speak in her own voice. [Living on Paper] provides fascinating insights into her philosophy and, most of all, into her immensely complicated personal life. Murdoch's many fans are in for a treat... [A] superb volume. --Glenn Altschuler, San Francisco Chronicle [A] handsome and well-edited volume... As well as indicating [Iris Murdoch's] philosophical enthusiasms, the letters also trace her spiritual and political trajectories from apprentice existentialist to Christian-Buddhist mystic and from zealous Communist Party member to Margaret Thatcher supporter, making Living on Paper a noteworthy contribution to the intellectual and cultural history of postwar England. --George O'Brien, American Scholar The years since Murdoch's death in 1999 haven't lacked for biographical portraits of her... Living on Paper represents something fresh, though: a composite picture of the author formed through her own words to friends, lovers, colleagues, and students... The volume's real value ... lies in its illumination of the complexity of Murdoch's identity and relationships, which, it's clear, fed both her fiction and her thought in fruitful ways... The letters show her from multiple angles: variously bantering, serious, generous, retrograde then progressive, arrogant then painfully doubting her own abilities. --Alex Roman, PopMatters [A] rich collection of letters... [T]hey create a vivid mosaic memoir, catching slivers of a vibrant private voice, overheard. --Felicity Plunkett, The Australian Spanning 60 years and including more than 700 letters, this collection reveals the contours of Murdoch's personality and her important friendships... Readers will be introduced to many of Murdoch's longtime correspondents from her early days as a student, communist activist, and United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation worker, and they will see those relationships develop throughout her career. --Choice The selection of letters is lively and varied. It is preceded by a lucid introduction about Murdoch's writing career, suggests ways in which her experiences flowed into the novels and deals judiciously with the apparently paradoxical contrasts between the moral idealism of the novels and philosophy and the promiscuity of her personal life. --Priscilla Marti, London Magazine What this eye-opening collection of letters does is to give us a fuller picture of an extraordinary person who led a passionately intense and painfully complex life. --Cassandra Langer, Gay & Lesbian Review My favorite read of 2016 was Living on Paper: Letters from Iris Murdoch 1934-1995... Yes, you know: that Iris Murdoch! ... But what about those weird novels? A Severed Head? The Bell? Bruno's Dream? The Nice and the Good? The Sea, the Sea? And so-the-so-on? Addictive, hilarious: pure intellectual crystal meth. If, like me, you've read them all, you'll hoover these letters up at once. --Terry Castle, Artforum