Education of a Felon (Paperback)

Author: Edward/ Styron Bunker
Save
40%
See more in General
Share this Product

This product is eligible for Free Shipping on orders over $10. Click for details. Eligible for FREE SHIPPING
*Some restrictions apply. Click here for details.
List Price:  See Details$16.95
You Save: (40%) $6.85
Our Price: $10.10
Shipping $3.60

Buy.com Total Price: $13.70
Qty   
In Stock: Usually Ships in 1 to 2 business days.
Very few left In Stock! Order soon -- product may sell out.
Format: Paperback
Permalink
Marketplace Buying Choices
Alibris Media 2
Price: $9.69
+ $3.99 shipping
In Stock
See all 5 New & Used from $7.79 + $3.99 shipping
What's this?
Product Summary
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780312280765
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Publish Date: 8/1/2001
Buy.com Sku: 30741184
Item#: R7MS2J
Dimensions (in Inches) 9H x 6.25L x 1T
Pages: 320
 
"In March of 1933, Southern California suddenly began to rock and roll to a sound from deep within the ground. Bric-a-brac danced on mantels and shattered on floors. Windows cracked and cascaded onto sidewalks. Lathe-and-plaster houses screeched and bent this way and that, much like matchboxes. Brick buildings stood rigid until overwhelmed by the vibrations, then fell into a pile of rubble and a cloud of dust. The Long Beach Civic Auditorium collapsed, with many killed. I was later told that I was conceived at the moment of the earthquake and born on New Year's Eve, 1933, in Hollywood's Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. Los Angeles was under a torrential deluge, with palm trees and houses floating down its canyons. When I was five, I heard my mother proclaim that the earthquake and storm were omens, for I was trouble from the start, beginning with colic..." (from the first line)

The "Los Angeles Times" bestselling autobiography of America's toughest prison writer centers on Bunker's education at San Quentin and on the mean streets of Los Angeles.
 
Annotation:
The author of this memoir spent a good part of his life in California prisons; when he wasn't in jail, he was living among criminals and ex-cons in Southern California. His memoir lights up all these dark underworlds and tells of how he emerged from them to become a writer and actor.

 

Praise
Literary Review
"[This] autobiography...is an account of a largely criminal career, which he relates without explanation, apology or regrets. At the same time, it is the heroic story of how a man saves his own life by turning himself into a writer. The two strands of narrative are fused. It is something to marvel at an applaud....What's most impressive about his autobiography is the near-nonchalance with which he bears witness to a life and times which were brutal and often intolerable....He writes well and truthfully about crime, but as an author he has paid his dues several times over...." - Philip Oakes December 1999/January 2000

Los Angeles Times Book Review
"EDUCATION OF A FELON is a masterful summation of the hard and brutal life of crime and prison from which Edward Bunker chiseled the vigorous prose that marks him as America's foremost chronicler of prison life...." 12/03/2000

New York Times Book Review
"This is a rough-hewn memoir by a rough-hewn man." - Laura Jamison 07/16/2000


 
Author Bio
William Styron
William Styron's father, an engineer, came from an old Virginia slave-owning family; his mother was a Northerner who died of cancer when he was 12. Deeply troubled by his mother's painful death, Styron was sent to an Episcopal boarding school. He then enrolled in college but dropped out to join the Marines during World War II. He saw no action; however, part of his O.C.S. training was a writing course at Duke University, which set him on the path of literature. After the war, he studied at Duke, graduating in 1947 and moving to New York to work as an editor at McGraw-Hill. After a few months he quit, took another writing course, and began work on his first novel. LIE DOWN IN DARKNESS was published in 1951 and won the Prix de Rome in 1952. Styron returned to the Marines for the Korean War, an experience he used in his second novel THE LONG MARCH (1956). After the war, Styron joined the American expatriate set in Paris, becoming friends with George Plimpton, Peter Matthiessen, and Donald Hall, among others, and participated in the founding of the Paris Review in the early 1950s. He also traveled to the Riviera and to Italy, where he met and married Rose Burgunder, an American poet. They returned to the U.S. and settled in Connecticut, where Styron has lived much of his life since then. With the publication of his Pulitzer Prize-winning THE CONFESSIONS OF NAT TURNER in 1967 and SOPHIE'S CHOICE in 1979 (which was made into a successful film in 1983), Styron became recognized as a major voice in American fiction, an author willing to grapple with terrible moral dilemmas from both a historical and individual perspective. One of Styron's most famous quotes was that "Human beings are a hair's breadth away from catastrophe at all times." In 1990 Styron turned to the memoir form, and in DARKNESS VISIBLE, he exposed his long struggle with depression, debilitating writer's block, and suicidal thoughts. However he overcame his depression, and died a natural death in Martha's Vineyard in 2006.

 
 
Read A Chapter


Chapter One


NO HEAVEN,
NO HELL


In March of 1933, Southern California suddenly began to rock and roll to a sound from deep within the ground. Bric-a-brac danced on mantels and shattered on floors. Windows cracked and cascaded onto sidewalks. Lathe-and-plaster houses screeched and bent this way and that, much like matchboxes. Brick buildings stood rigid until overwhelmed by the vibrations, then fell into a pile of rubble and a cloud of dust. The Long Beach Civic Auditorium collapsed, with many killed. I was later told that I was conceived at the moment of the earthquake and born on New Year's Eve, 1933, in Hollywood's Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. Los Angeles was under a torrential deluge, with palm trees and houses floating down its canyons.

    When I was five, I heard my mother proclaim that the earthquake and storm were om

Click to read more...

  
Product Image


Suggestion Box
Every voice counts, so stand up and be heard! Your opinion is important to us. If you have spotted a typo, discovered an incorrect price, or encountered a technical issue on this page, we want to hear about it. Thanks again for your feedback, and happy shopping! Please note: we are unable to reply directly to suggestions.
For additional information, click here to visit our Help Center.
Quick Help My Account What are you looking for? Country