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In The Unstrung Harp the novelist, Mr. Earbrass, goes to a literary party. "The talk deals with disappointing sales, inadequate publicity, worse than inadequate royalties, idiotic or criminal reviews, others' declining talent, and the unspeakable horror of the literary life." Perhaps this last explains Edward Gorey's own retirement to Massachusetts. Indeed, along with the book's 200 line drawings and 24 color plates, the best part of The World of Edward Gorey may be the photographs of the artist's dilapidated, book-strewn house on Cape Cod. Though Ross' interview and Wilkin's essay are both illuminating, the real Goreyphile yearns for even more detailed biographical information--about Gorey's nearly 30 years of faithful attendance at all the performances of the New York City Ballet, about his work as a cover artist for Anchor paperbacks, about precisely how he creates his distinctive artwork. Doubtless other books will be written about the irresistible Edward Gorey. After all, only a few other comic imaginations--P.G. Wodehouse and Garrison Keillor come to mind--have created worlds at once so utterly familiar and yet so completely original.
Michael Dirda is a writer and editor for the Washington Post Book World.
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