Coffee with... Biographies

The Coffee With... biography series is a selection of books published by Duncan Baird between 2007 and 2008 each containing fictional conversations with real famous people, conveying biographical fact. A review of Coffee with Oscar Wilde in The Independent, for example, explains that in it the author, Wilde's grandson Merlin Holland, "offers an imaginary and imaginative conversation between himself and his grandfather, set in a contemporary Parisian café". The review described that volume as "an ideal introduction to Wilde's seductive and intellectually electrifying world".[1]

The first set of volumes published in 2007 covered eight figures: Ernest Hemingway, Gautama Buddha, Marilyn Monroe, Michelangelo, Mozart, Plato, Oscar Wilde, and Groucho Marx.[2]

Works in the Series

Title Published Author Foreword by
Coffee With Aristotle2008[3]Jonathan BarnesJulian Barnes
Coffee With Dickens2008[4]Paul SchlickePeter Ackroyd
Coffee With Einstein2008Carlos I. CalleRoger Penrose
Coffee With Groucho2007Simon Louvish
Coffee With Hemingway2007Kirk Curnutt[5]John Updike
Coffee With Isaac Newton2008Michael WhiteBill Bryson
Coffee With Marilyn2007Yona Zeldis McDonough
Coffee With Mark Twain2008Fred Kaplan
Coffee With Michelangelo2007James W. HallJohn Julius Norwich
Coffee With Mozart2007Julian RushtonJohn Tavener
Coffee With Oscar Wilde2007Merlin Holland (Wilde's grandson)[1]Simon Callow
Coffee With Plato2007Donald R. MoorRobert M. Pirsig
Coffee With Shakespeare2008Stanley WellsJoseph Fiennes
Coffee With The Buddha2007Joan Duncan OliverAnnie Lennox

References

  1. Wright, Thomas (27 October 2007). "The Complete Works of Oscar Wilde Vol 4: Criticism, ed Josephine M Guy (Oxford £85); Coffee With Oscar Wilde, by Merlin Holland (Duncan Baird £6.99)". The Independent. Retrieved 6 January 2018.
  2. Rogers, Michael (21 June 2007). "Coffee With Hemingway". Library Journal. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  3. "Julian Barnes Bibliography". JulianBarnes.com. Retrieved 6 January 2018.
  4. "Peter Ackroyd". Book Reporter. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  5. "Kirk Curnutt". The Hemingway Society. Retrieved 7 January 2018.


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