Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Paul Bowles

 
Who2 Biography: Paul Bowles, Writer / Composer
Paul Bowles
Source

  • Born: 30 December 1910
  • Birthplace: Jamaica, New York
  • Died: 18 November 1999
  • Best Known As: Author of The Sheltering Sky

Paul Bowles is best known as the expatriate author of the 1949 novel The Sheltering Sky, and is a literary icon for his connections with legendary 20th century artists such as Gertrude Stein, Tennessee Williams, Orson Welles, Aaron Copland and William S. Burroughs. After visiting Europe and Northern Africa in the early 1930s, Bowles worked in New York as a composer and music critic. In 1938 he married acclaimed writer Jane Auer (later Jane Bowles), and in 1947 he moved to Morocco, where he began writing. The Sheltering Sky was a critical and commercial success, and Bowles secured a place for himself as an outsider and an astute observer of the differences between cultures. His other works include The Spider's House (1955), A Life Full of Holes (1964) and an autobiography, Without Stopping (1972).

Italian filmmaker Bernardo Bertolucci made a film version of The Sheltering Sky (1990), starring Debra Winger and John Malkovich.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Paul Frederic Bowles
Top

(born Dec. 30, 1910, New York, N.Y., U.S. — died Nov. 18, 1999, Tangier, Mor.) U.S.-Moroccan composer, writer, and translator. Bowles studied musical composition with Aaron Copland and wrote music for more than 30 plays and films. He moved to Morocco in the 1940s. He set his best-known novel, The Sheltering Sky (1948; film, 1990), in Tangier. His protagonists, in that novel and other works, are often Westerners maimed by their contact with traditional cultures that bewilder them, and violent events and psychological collapse are recounted in a detached and elegant style. His wife, Jane Bowles (1917 – 73), is known for the novel Two Serious Ladies (1943) and the play In the Summer House (1953).

For more information on Paul Frederic Bowles, visit Britannica.com.

Music Encyclopedia: Paul Bowles
Top

(b New York, 30 Dec 1910). American composer and writer. He studied in the late 1920s and early 1930s with Copland, Thomson and Boulanger. Most of his witty, evocative music, in many genres including opera, dates from before 1949, when he became more active as a writer.



Biography: Paul Bowles
Top

Even though Paul Bowles (born 1910) wrote stories, composed music, and lived in some of the world's most exotic places, he was not one who craved recognition. The general public, even those who considered themselves well-informed, might not have recognized his name. Yet, Bowles became the standard bearer for the "beat" generation, commonly referred to as "beatniks."

Paul Frederick Bowles was born on December 30, 1910, in New York City. He was the only child of Claude Dietz Bowles and Rena Winnewisser Bowles. He was raised in Jamaica, Queens, on Long Island, one of America's first suburbs. Bowles' father was a dentist who had wanted to be a concert violinist. Despite the advantages of a middle class lifestyle, his childhood was not a pleasant one. As Bowles said of his father in a 1972 autobiography, Without Stopping, "I took for granted his constant and unalloyed criticism. His mere presence meant misery."

Bowles mentioned in a 1995 Washington Post, interview the story of how it seemed his father had tried to kill him. In February 1911, when Bowles was two months old, his mother's mother found him lying in a basket on the windowsill, window open and snow coming down. Had she not rescued the infant he would have been dead within an hour. That, at least, is what she told the boy [Bowles] a few years later. 'Your father's a devil,' she proclaimed." Bowles was much closer to his mother, a person of many cultural aspirations, herself a poet. Perhaps key to his later profession, Bowles spent much of his childhood alone. By his own admission, he had no other children in his life until he was five years old. His fantasies helped him to escape his unpleasant world, especially his father.

Bowles spent most of his summers in childhood and adolescence either at his paternal grandparents' home at Seneca Lake, in upstate New York, or his maternal grandparents' 165-acre farm in western Massachusetts. His elementary schooling was at the Model School, a teacher training school. There he studied music, learning piano, music theory, and ear training. He was nine years old when he attempted to compose his first opera. Bowles relished the family phonograph and bought records on a regular basis. Because he was not allowed to play those records while his father was home, music became a forbidden pleasure.

Bowles attended public high schools in suburban New York, near his home in Jamaica. He was not at first fond of the time he was forced to spend there. When he went to Jamaica High School and joined the monthly literary magazine, his attitude began to change. He developed a passion for writing. Bowles began to collect books. He was particularly fond of those that were beautifully bound, and collected a number that were inscribed to him by the authors. This interest was sparked by an aunt who lived in Greenwich Village [New York] and introduced him to the head children's librarian of the New York Public Library.

In 1928, at the age of 18, Bowles had his first poem published in Transition, a prestigious avant garde literary publication. According to Streitfeld in the Washington Post, this was similar to the distinction of being published in the New Yorker, an unusual accomplishment for such a young writer. This was two months after he graduated from Jamaica High School. During that time, Bowles studied at the School of Design and Liberal Arts in Manhattan.

Left College for Paris

Bowles entered the University of Virginia (UVA) in Charlottesville, and created quite a stir after only a few months. Without notifying his parents, or authorities at the school, he set off for Paris to work as a switchboard operator at the office of the Herald Tribune, a newspaper published primarily for Americans living in Europe. His parents eventually persuaded him to return to the United States, and to finish out his first year of college, which he did in the spring of 1930.

In the summer of 1931 he was introduced to composer Aaron Copland, who quickly became his teacher and mentor. In September of that year, he went to Yaddo, an artist retreat and colony outside Saratoga Springs, New York. Copland was scheduled to spend time there before he left for Berlin in November. Bowles thought it best to continue to study with him. He sailed for Paris and had plans to join Copland in Berlin three weeks later.

In December 1930, Bowles was asked by a friend to edit an issue of the University of Richmond's (Virginia) literary magazine, The Messenger. He was excited at the prospect of doing so, and decided to enlist contributions from several notable writers, including William Carlos Williams, Nancy Cunard, and Gertrude Stein. They all obliged. Bowles continued to correspond with Stein, and sent her a copy of the magazine when it was published. Thus began a friendship with Stein, and eventually with her companion Alice B. Toklas, that would continue for the rest of her life.

In his autobiography, Without Stopping, Bowles recalls his first meeting with the two women not long after his arrival in Paris. He stated, "One of the first things I did was to go around to 27 rue de Fleuras and find Gertrude Stein's door … Gertrude Stein appeared, looking just as she did in her photographs, except that the expression of her face was rather more pleasant. 'What is it? Who are you?' she said. I told her and heard for the first time her wonderfully hearty laugh. She opened the door so that I could go in. Then Alice Toklas came downstairs, and we sat in the big studio. We thought that you were an elderly gentleman, at least seventy-five,' Gertrude Stein told me. 'A highly eccentric elderly gentleman,' added Alice Toklas. 'We were certain of it.' They asked me to dinner for the following night."

Bowles said in his 1972 autobiography that, "I existed primarily for Gertrude Stein as a sociological exhibit; for her I was the first example of my kind. I provided her initial encounter with a species then rare, now the commonest of contemporary phenomena, the American suburban child with its unrelenting spleen." Stein pronounced an early dislike for Bowles' poetry, yet remained fascinated by his other work. At her suggestion, Bowles traveled to Tangier instead of spending his time on the French Riviera, as he had planned. When discussing their plans in her presence, Stein had said, "You don't want to go to Villefranche. Every-body's there. And St.-Jean-de-Luz is empty, and with an awful climate. The place you should go is Tangier." That travel suggestion proved to be an important one. In Tangier in the 1930s, Bowles found the intrigue on which he would thrive. In 1948, he moved there permanently.

From Paris, Bowles went to Berlin to continue his studies with Copland. There he met British writers Christopher Isherwood and Stephen Spender. Isherwood's story, I Am a Camera, that was taken to the Broadway stage in the late 1960s as the muscial, Cabaret, patterned the lead character after a friend of his. For the story, Isherwood adopted Bowles' name. His character was called Sally Bowles.

Tangier would eventually become his home, both physically and spiritually. Bowles said to Streitfeld in a Washington Post interview that when he saw the desert, the Sahara, for the first time, "I had a big desire to keep going. That's the main thing-to continue and continue. I didn't ask what would happen. I didn't think anything would happen. I just thought I'd see more and more. I'd feel more and more. And, finally, of course, I'd have to return." That, too, might have been the beginning of the change of consciousness for the generation that would follow him out of another world war, a decade and a half later.

Married to Soul Mate

Throughout the 1930s, Bowles worked with the Federal Theater Project in New York, part of the Works Progress Administration (WPA). During the Great Depression of the 1930s, President Franklin Roosevelt established various WPA programs across the Untied States-in everything from building bridges to painting murals on public buildings. It was a government-funded program to bring jobs to hundreds of thousands of unemployed Americans. The program was considered to be especially successful in the arts. Bowles began to write music for plays, in addition to his own compositions. He stayed with the project until 1937, when a spur-of-the-moment trip to Mexico with friends enticed him to resign in order to travel.

Shortly before his trip, Bowles met Jane Auer, a writer with whom he was immediately fascinated. She traveled to Mexico with them, only to depart early due to illness. When he returned to New York, he continued to see her. The two of them, as Bowles related, "used to spin fancies about how amusing it would be to get married and horrify everyone, above all, our respective families." On February 21, 1938, the day before Jane's 21st birthday, the two of them were married in Manhattan in a small Dutch Reformed Church. Gena Dagel Caponi, in her study, Paul Bowles: Romantic Savage, said that the "wedding gave his parents something to be unhappy about in the shape of an event they could not help but bless. It was a masterstroke of passive aggression."

The Bowles' marriage lasted until 1973 when Jane died in Malaga, Spain. She suffered years of ill-health following a 1957 stroke that gravely affecting her eyesight. Both Bowles and his wife considered themselves homosexual, yet maintained a sexual relationship for at least some part of their marriage. More important to them was their companionship, and an unbreakable bond of love that did not stay bound to normal societal conventions. They were devoted to each other. But their wild lifestyle which included alcohol-Bowles himself noted that his wife was "overcome with a desire for alcohol"-as well as her mental and physical decline, created an aura of melancholy surrounding them. Bowles often set aside his own work to care for her.

His Music, His Words

Bowles' life in New York throughout the 1930s and 1940s was at the center of the theatrical world. He was recognized as a key composer of what was known as "incidental music," as the music that wove itself through many non-musical plays. Bowles worked with some of the best-known writers and playwrights, such as Orson Welles, John Houseman, William Saroyan. He teamed often with Tennessee Williams, for whom he composed the music for one of his most famous plays, The Glass Menagerie. K. Robert Schwarz in a New York Times article quoted composer Ned Rorem: "The melodies say what they have to say and then stop, without beating a dead horse. The accompaniments are exquisite, honed and pared like Faure. And he had a kind of monopoly on theater music in New York, since he was able to hit the nail on the head in illustrating what was going on." From 1942 until 1946, Bowles also served as music critic for the New York Herald Tribune. He wrote over 400 well-respected and sharp-witted reviews.

Bowles pursued other music, as well as his own. In 1959, he received a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation for a special project sponsored by the Library of Congress. His Moroccan music collection, housed in the Library of Congress, included recordings Bowles made during the four-month project. In addition to the recordings of music native to his beloved Morocco, he gathered photographs and other documentation of Moroccan folk, popular, and art music. Bowles captured the music and dance of various tribes and other groups of the area at 23 different locations. He added to the collection with further recordings made from 1960 to 1962.

Schwarz noted how Bowles' music contrasted with his novels, and other fiction. Bowles commented on that, too, having said, "The music and the fiction both come from the same mind but from different sections of it. It's like two separate symnasiums. I leave the room where I'm writing the words, shut the door, go in the other room and write music."

As prolific as his music had become, his writing was destined for a wider audience. The publication of his novel, The Sheltering Sky, in 1949 earned critical acclaim. The story focused on a married couple who seek life's deeper meanings throughout a spiritual journey through the desert. It was noted that the couple bore a striking resemblance, to Jane and Paul Bowles themselves. Bowles enjoyed a resurrection of interest in all of his writings, as well as his music, when famed Italian film director, Bernardo Bertolucci turned his most famous book into a movie, starring American actors Debra Winger and John Malkovich.

His other novels, which also dealt with Tangier and his journeys around the world, included: Let It Come Down, 1981; The Spider's House, 1982; Points in Time; 1984; Too Far from Home: The Selected Writings of Paul Bowles, 1995; and Up Above the World, (reprint edition) 1996. Among his numerous short stories were: The Delicate Prey; A Hundred Camels in the Courtyard; Call at Corazon; and A Thousand Days for Mokhtar. Bowles was known as a translator of many Moroccan folk tales.

Perhaps as fascinating as Bowles' fiction and poetry, were his own autobiographical journals and letters to friends. In Touch, The Letters of Paul Bowles, edited by Jeffrey Miller in 1994, revealed much of his personal life from 1928 through 1989. Bowles was a man who had led a life apart from the eye of the tabloid press. He did receive many visitors to his home in Tangier, although he had no telephone. Those who came, the famous and obscure, believed a visit to Bowles was essential if they were to be taken seriously by the literary world.

When Streitfeld interviewed Bowles during his 1996 visit to the United States, he had traveled to the States to receive medical treatment at Emory University in Atlanta. Bowles indicated the what kept him going during his stay in Atlanta was the thought that he would be returning to Morocco in a few days. Streitfeld asked him if he would ever come back to the States, especially for a planned festival of his music that spring. All Bowles said was, "I hope not."

In his late 80s, Bowles seemed ready for death. He had been the young man of the charmed Paris set before the war. He was the older man among the generation of the Beats, all of whom he outlasted-many by decades. His stamina, his self-proclaimed discipline imposed from his childhood, served him well. He survived all of the intoxicants the others did not. Bowles ended his autobiography with this contemplation in the very last paragraph: "Good-bye, says the dying man to the mirror they hold in front of him. We won't be seeing each other any more. When I quoted Valery's [French poet] epigram in The Sheltering Sky, it seemed a poignant bit of fantasy. Now, because I no longer imagine myself as an outlooker at the scene, but instead as the principal protagonist, it strikes me as repugnant. To make it right, the dying man would have to add two words to his little farewell, and they are: 'Thank God!' "

Further Reading

Bowles, Paul, In Touch, The Letters Paul Bowles, edited by Jeffrey Miller, Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 1994.

Bowles, Paul, Without Stopping, An Autobiography, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1972.

Contemporary Authors, Gale, 1996, Volume 50.

Green, Michelle, The Dream At the End of the World, HarperCollins Publishers, 1991.

New York Times, September 17, 1995, p. 27; March 17, 1996, p. 32.

Washington Post, February 9, 1995, p. C1

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Paul Bowles
Top
Bowles, Paul, 1910-99, American writer and composer, b. New York City. He studied in Paris with Virgil Thomson and Aaron Copland and composed (1930s-40s) a number of modernist operas, ballets, song cycles, and orchestral and chamber pieces. From 1947 on he lived in Tangier, Morocco. Strongly individualistic and written with an austere lack of sentimentality, his fiction is frequently set in the Arab world and often traces the corruption of innocence and the psychic disintegration of "civilized man" in a savagely primitive environment. His works include the short-story collections The Delicate Prey (1950), The Time of Friendship (1967), Collected Stories, 1939-1976 (1979), and Unwelcome Words (1988); and the novels The Sheltering Sky (1949), Up above the World (1966), and In the Red Room (1981). His 62 short stories were brought together in a 2001 collection. Bowles was also an accomplished travel writer, poet, and photographer.

Bibliography

See his autobiography, Without Stopping (1972); biographies by C. Sawyer-Laucanno (1989) and M. Dillon (1998); film biography, Let it Come Down (1999), by J. Baichwal; In Touch: The Letters of Paul Bowles (1994), ed. by J. Miller; Conversations with Paul Bowles (1993), ed. by G. D. Caponi; study by R. F. Patterson (1986); bibliography by J. Miller (1986).

His wife was Jane Auer Bowles, 1917-73, American writer, b. New York City. Original and idiosyncratic, her works often treat the conflict between the weak and the strong. They include the novel Two Serious Ladies (1943) and a play, In the Summer House (1954).

Bibliography

See her Collected Works (1978); biography by M. Dillon (1981); Out in the World: The Collected Letters of Jane Bowles (1985), ed. by M. Dillon.

Works: Works by Paul Bowles
Top
(1910-1999)

1949The Sheltering Sky. Bowles's first novel traces the disintegration of an American couple who travel into the North African desert. Regarded as a cult classic of existentialism, it is one of the defining novels of the postwar period. Bowles, who studied with Aaron Copland and Virgil Thompson, was a composer who produced the opera The Wind Remains (1943). Bowles met Gertrude Stein in the 1930s, and she suggested that he explore Morocco, where he would live for much of the rest of his life.
1950The Delicate Prey and Other Stories. Bowles presents disturbing images and existential themes in exotic locales in this story collection, which prompts critic Leslie Fiedler to call the author "the pornographer of terror." It includes the frequently anthologized story "A Distant Episode," in which an American professor is seized by nomads, mutilated, and turned into a dancing pet. Tennessee Williams would regard the story as "a true masterpiece of short fiction."
1952Let It Come Down. Bowles's second novel details the dislocation and self-destruction of a New York bank clerk who travels to Tangiers, entering a tangled world of drugs, violence, and betrayal. William S. Burroughs considered the novel's ghastly ending among his favorite passages in contemporary literature.
1955The Spider's House. Bowles's most conventional novel is the story of an expatriate American writer living in Morocco, who tries to bridge the cultural gap between the Western and the Muslim worlds. In the characterization of the young Moroccan, Amar, Bowles delivers one of the most convincing portraits of an Arab by a Western writer.
1993Too Far from Home. This omnibus collection of Bowles's writings, including travel essays, parts of a memoir, letters, and journals, is most notable for its inclusion of several highly regarded short stories and the complete text of the 1949 novel that is Bowles's masterpiece, The Sheltering Sky.

Artist: Paul Bowles
Top
  • Period: Modern (1910-1949)
  • Country: USA
  • Born: December 30, 1910 in New York, NY
  • Died: November 18, 1999 in Tangier, Morocco
  • Genres: Chamber Music, Choral Music

Biography

Paul Frederic Bowles was a composer of note and a leader among the young American artists in Paris in the 1930s. He is best-known, however, as a novelist; he is of considerably more importance in the field of American literature than in music. He became fascinated with literature as a youth and traveled to Paris to be part of the active American literary scene there. This first trip was not especially successful: The closest he got to writing was working as a switchboard operator at the Paris edition of the New York Herald Tribune. He returned to the U.S., worked as a bookstore clerk, and took an interest in composing. Some of his early songs impressed Aaron Copland, who gave him informal lessons at his home in Saratoga, NY. Bowles' biographies often assert that he was a "student" of Copland, as well as of Nadia Boulanger and Virgil Thomson. Copland has insisted that he never had any students, in a formal sense, and Thomson said that Bowles did not readily accept the role of pupil and was essentially self-taught. Predictably, Bowles' one brush with higher education, attending the University of Virginia, was brief and of little importance. Copland took Bowles along with him on a trip to Morocco and Paris. Bowles remained in Paris, where he took one of his few successful courses, with Boulanger in counterpoint. A large portion of Bowles' musical compositions date from these years. They include a cantata Par le Détroit; a vocal work called Scènes d'Anabase; and, after he returned to the U.S. in 1936, a ballet, Yankee Clipper. He began to specialize in incidental music for plays, especially those by his friend Tennessee Williams. In 1938, he married Jane Sydney Auer, who published incisively written fiction of her own as Jane Bowles.

Soon after the war ended and travel became possible, he was drawn back to North Africa, settling in Tangier Morocco. He shifted his main orientation to writing, producing a classic novel, The Sheltering Sky, in 1949. From then on, most of his efforts were in the literary field, although he continued to compose. Although based in North Africa, his penchant for exotic places led him to travel widely. He died of a heart attack in Tangier. ~ Joseph Stevenson, All Music Guide
Actor: Paul Bowles
Top
  • Born: Dec 30, 1910 in Queens, New York City, New York
  • Died: Nov 18, 1999 in Tangiers, Morocco
  • Occupation: Actor, Writer
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, History
  • Career Highlights: Senso, The Sheltering Sky, Paul Bowles: Halfmoon
  • First Major Screen Credit: Dreams That Money Can Buy (1947)

Biography

An artist of literary and musical legend, Paul Bowles could also be considered one of the grandfathers of the Beat movement. A native New Yorker, Bowles began dabbling in poetry as a child and shortly thereafter began studying music with Aaron Copland, and later formed a working relationship with Leonard Bernstein. During the 1930s and 1940s, he became a mentor, of sorts, to a number of young writers including the likes of William Burroughs and Allen Ginsburg. Also, during the same time period, Bowles composed musicals on Broadway, as well as featured music for the stage works of Tennessee Williams, William Saroyan, and Orson Welles. His music and his literature were almost exactly polar opposites of each other, with his music having been described as light and enchanting. His novels, on the other hand, tended to highlight darker themes. Bowles was married to fellow writer Jane Sydney Auer, which proved to be a very unconventional marriage, due to the fact that both Bowles and his wife were homosexual and both enjoyed extramarital affairs. Bowles died in late 1999, at the age of 88. ~ Ryan Shriver, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Paul Bowles
Top

Paul Frederic Bowles (December 30, 1910November 18, 1999) was an American expatriate composer, author, and translator. Following a cultured middle-class upbringing in New York City, during which he displayed a talent for music and writing, Bowles pursued his education at the University of Virginia before making various trips to Paris in the 1930s. He studied music with Aaron Copland and in New York wrote music for various theatrical productions, as well as other compositions. He achieved critical and popular success with the publication in 1949 of his first novel The Sheltering Sky, set in what was known as French North Africa, which he had visited in 1931.

In 1947 Bowles settled in Tangier, Morocco, and his wife, Jane Bowles followed in 1948. Except for winters spent in Sri Lanka (then known as Ceylon) during the early 1950s, Tangier was his home for the remainder of his life.

Paul Bowles died in 1999 at the age of 88. His ashes are buried in upstate New York.

Contents

Life

1910-1930: Family and education

Paul Bowles was born in Jamaica, Queens, New York City the only child of Rena (née Rennewisser) and Claude Dietz Bowles, a dentist. His childhood was materially comfortable, but Bowles senior was a cold and domineering parent, opposed to any form of play or entertainment, feared by both his son and wife. According to family legend, he had tried to kill his newborn son by leaving him exposed on a window-ledge during a snowstorm; the story may not be true, but Bowles believed it was, and it encapsulates his relationship with his father. Such warmth as there was in his life as a child came from his mother, who read Nathaniel Hawthorne and Edgar Allan Poe to him - it was to the latter that he later attributed his own desire to write stories like "The Delicate Prey," "A Distant Episode," and "Pages from Cold Point"[1]

Bowles could read by the time he was 3 and within the year was writing stories. Soon, he wrote surrealistic poetry and music.[2] In 1922, at age 11, he bought his first book of poetry, Arthur Waley's A Hundred and Seventy Chinese Poems, and at age seventeen one of his poems, "Spire Song," was accepted for publication in the twelfth volume of "Transition", a literary journal based in Paris that served as a forum for some of the greatest proponents of modernismDjuna Barnes, James Joyce, Paul Éluard, Gertrude Stein and others.[3] His interest in music also dated from his childhood, when his father bought a phonograph and classical records (Bowles was interested in jazz but such records were forbidden in the house). His family bought a piano and the young Bowles studied musical theory, singing, and piano. When he was 15 a performance of Stravinsky's The Firebird at Carnegie Hall made a profound impression: "Hearing The Firebird made me determined to continue improvising on the piano when my father was out of the house, and to notate my own music with an increasing degree of knowing that I had happened upon a new and exciting mode of expression."[1]

Bowles entered the University of Virginia in 1928, where his interests included T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land, Prokofiev, Duke Ellington, Gregorian chants, and the blues. He also heard music by George Antheil and Henry Cowell. In April 1929 he dropped out without informing his parents and sailed with a one-way ticket for Paris and no intention of ever returning - not, he said later, running away, but "running toward something, although I didn't know what at the time."[2]] Nevertheless, by July he returned to New York and took a job at Duttons Bookshop in Manhattan, where he began work on an unfinished book of fiction, Without Stopping (not to be confused with his later autobiography of the same title). At the insistence of his parents he returned to the University of Virginia, but left after one semester to go back to Paris with Aaron Copland, with whom he had been studying composition in New York.[2] It was during the autumn of 1930 in Paris that Bowles began work on his own first musical composition, the "Sonata for Oboe and Clarinet", which he finished the following year and which premiered in New York at the Aeolian Hall on Wigmore St, 16th December 1931, the whole concert (which also included work by Copland and Virgil Thomson) was "panned" by New York critics.[4] although his first known completed compositional work was to translate some vocal pieces of Kurt Schwitters to piano music in Berlin.[5]

1931-1946: France and New York

In France, Bowles became a part of Gertrude Stein's literary and artistic circle. On her advice he made his first visit to Tangier with Aaron Copland in the summer of 1931.[6] They took a house on the Mountain above Tangier Bay. Morocco was later to become the home of Bowles (and the inspiration for many of his short stories).[7] From there he traveled back to Berlin, where he met Stephen Spender and Christopher Isherwood, before returning to North Africa the next year to travel throughout other parts of Morocco, the Sahara, Algeria and Tunisia.

In 1937 he returned to New York, and over the next decade established a solid reputation as a composer, collaborating with Orson Welles, Tennessee Williams and others on music for stage productions as well as orchestral pieces. In 1938 he married the author and playwright Jane Auer. It was an unconventional marriage: their intimate relationships were with people of their own sex, but they maintained close ties to each other,[8] and despite being frequently anthologised as a gay writer Bowles always regarded such typecasting as both absurd and irrelevant.[9] After a brief sojourn in France they were prominent among the literary figures of New York throughout the 1940s, with Paul working under Virgil Thomson as a music critic at the New York Herald Tribune. His light opera The Wind Remains, based on a poem by García Lorca, was performed in 1943 with choreography by Merce Cunningham and conducted by Leonard Bernstein. His translation of Sartre's play Huis-clos ("No Exit"), directed by John Huston, won a Drama Critic's Award in 1943.

In 1945 he began writing prose again, beginning with a few short stories including A Distant Episode. His wife Jane, he said, was the main influence upon his taking up fiction as an adult, through the publication of her first novel, Two Serious Ladies (1943).[10]

1947-1956: Early years in Tangier

In 1947 Paul Bowles received a contract for a novel from Doubleday and moved permanently to Tangier, where Jane joined him in 1948. Bowles commented "I was a composer for as long as I've been a writer. I came here because I wanted to write a novel. I had a commission to do it. I was sick of writing music for other people - Joseph Losey, Orson Welles, a whole lot of other people, endless."[11] Bowles traveled alone into the Algerian Sahara to work on the novel. Bowles commented: "I wrote in bed in hotels in the desert"[12] The Sheltering Sky - the title came from a song, "Down Among the Sheltering Palms", which Bowles had heard every summer as a child[13] - was first published by John Lehmann in England in September 1949 after Doubleday rejected the manuscript.[14] Bowles commented "I sent it out to Doubleday and they refused it. They said "We asked for a novel." They didn't consider it a novel. I had to give back my advance. My agent told me later they called the editor on the carpet for having refused the book - only after they saw that it was selling fast. It only had to do with sales. They didn't bother to read it."[15]A belated first American edition by New Directions appeared the following month. The plot follows three Americans, Port, his wife Kit and their friend, Tunner, as they journey through the desert of an unnamed North African country, (although the narrative mentions that Port "heard all three of the town's tongues: Arabic, Spanish and French" which places the novel location firmly within the city of Tangier, being the only coastal port city in North Africa that has "all three tongues"[16]) culminating in the death of one (Port) and the descent into madness of another (Kit). The reviewer for Time magazine commented that the ends visited upon the two main characters "seem appropriate but by no means tragic", but that "Bowles scores cleanly with his minor characters: Arab pimps and prostitutes, French officers in garrison towns, [and] a stupidly tiresome pair of tourists—mother & son."[17] Tennessee Williams in The New York Times was far more positive, commenting that the book was like a summer thunderstorm, "pulsing with interior flashes of fire".[18] The book quickly rose to the New York Times best-seller list, going through three printings in two months.[19]

The Sheltering Sky was followed in 1950 by a first collection of short stories. Titled A Little Stone (John Lehmann, London, August 1950), which excluded two of Bowles' most famous short stories, "Pages From Cold Point" and "The Delicate Prey", on the advice of Cyril Connolly and Somerset Maugham, that if they were included in the collection distribution and/or censorship difficulties might ensue.[20] The American edition by Random House, The Delicate Prey and Other Stories, followed later in November 1950 and contained the two stories that had been excluded from the UK edition. When responding to the claim that almost all of the characters in "The Delicate Prey" were victimized by either physical or psychological violence,[21] Bowles responded: "Yes, I suppose. The violence served a therapeutic purpose. It’s unsettling to think that at any moment life can flare up into senseless violence. But it can and does, and people need to be ready for it. What you make for others is first of all what you make for yourself. If I’m persuaded that our life is predicated upon violence, that the entire structure of what we call civilization, the scaffolding that we’ve built up over the millennia, can collapse at any moment, then whatever I write is going to be affected by that assumption. The process of life presupposes violence, in the plant world the same as the animal world. But among the animals only man can conceptualize violence. Only man can enjoy the idea of destruction."[22]

A second novel, Let It Come Down, (John Lehmann, London, February 1952); like The Sheltering Sky, was set in North Africa (this time explicitly Tangier) and dealt with the disintegration of an American (Nelson Dyar), who was unprepared for the encounter with an alien culture. The first American edition by Random House followed later in the month.

A third novel, The Spider's House, (Random House, New York, November 1955) was set in Fez (immediately prior to Morocco's Independence and Sovereignty in 1956, away from the French Protectorate) and charted the relationships among three expatriates and a young Moroccan: John Stenham, Alain Moss, Lee Veyron and Omar.[23] Reviewers noted that it marked a departure from Bowles' earlier fiction in that it introduced a contemporary political theme, the conflict between Moroccan nationalism and French colonialism. The UK edition (Macdonald) followed in January 1957.

While Bowles was now concentrating on his career as a writer, he composed incidental music for nine plays presented by the American School of Tangier. The Bowleses became fixtures of the American and European expatriate scene in Tangier. Visitors included Truman Capote, Tennessee Williams and Gore Vidal. The Beat writers Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs and Gregory Corso followed in the mid-1950s and early 1960s. In 1951, Bowles was introduced to the Master Musicians of Jajouka, having first heard the musicians when he and Brion Gysin attended a festival or moussem at Sidi Kacem. Bowles' continued association with the Master Musicians of Jajouka and their hereditary leader Bachir Attar is described in Paul Bowles' book, a diary entitled Days: A Tangier Journal. In 1952, Bowles bought the tiny island of Taprobane, off the coast of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), where he wrote much of his novel The Spider's House, returning to Tangier in the warmer months.

1957-1973: Moroccan music and translation

In 1957 Jane Bowles suffered a mild stroke, which marked the beginning of a long and painful decline in her health which was to preoccupy Paul Bowles until Jane's death in 1973. This period also saw the first years of full Moroccan independence and Bowles, with a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation and sponsorship from the US Library of Congress, spent the months of August to September of 1959 traveling throughout Morocco with Christopher Wanklyn and Mohammed Larbi recording traditional Moroccan music.[24]

In 1959, Paul Bowles recorded in Morocco a wide variety of music from the different ethnic groups of that country, including the Jewish communities of Meknes and Essaouira.[25]

Another major project of these years was translating Moroccan authors and story-tellers including Mohamed Choukri, Ahmed Yacoubi, Larbi Layachi (under the pseudonym Driss ben Hamed Charhadi), and Mohammed Mrabet.

In the autumn of 1968, at the invitation of his friend Oliver Evans, Bowles spent one semester at the English Department of the San Fernando Valley State College, (now California State University, Northridge), teaching "Advanced Narrative Writing and the Modern European Novel."[26]

In 1970 Bowles and Daniel Halpern started the Tangier literary magazine Antaeus which was to feature many new authors, such as Lee Prosser, as well as more established authors such as Lawrence Ferlinghetti and his own work, such as "Afternoon with Antaeus", some fragments of an unfinished novel by his wife Jane Bowles along with excerpts from "The Summer House", and works by Daniel Halpern and others. Antaeus was published until 1994.

1974-1999: Later years

After the death of Jane Bowles on 4th May 1973 in Málaga, Spain, Bowles continued to live in Tangier, writing and receiving visitors to his modest apartment. In 1985 he published his translated version of one short story "The Circular Ruins" of Jorge Luis Borges which was published in a book of sixteen story translations (all by Bowles) called "She Woke Me Up So I Killed Her". This Borges story had already been translated and published by the three main Borges translators: Anthony Kerrigan, Anthony Bonner and James E. Irby and it is interesting to note the difference of styles amongst these four different translations. Bowles's version is in typical Bowles prose style form and is very identifiable from the other three, which all tend to stick to a more conservative idiomatic form of translation.

In the summers of 1980 and 1982 Paul Bowles conducted Writing Workshops in Morocco, (under the auspices of the School of Visual Arts in New York) at the American School of Tangier which were both very successful, so much so that several of his former students including Rodrigo Rey Rosa[27] who was the 2004 Winner of the Miguel Ángel Asturias National Prize in Literature and who is also the Literary Heir of the Estate of Paul Bowles[28]and Mark Terrill[29] went on to become successful authors.

In 1988, when Bowles was asked what his social life was like, he replied "I don't know what a social life is... My social life is restricted to those who serve me and give me meals, and those who want to interview me." and in the same interview when asked how he would summarize his achievement, replied "I've written some books and some music. That's what I've achieved."[30]

Bowles made a cameo appearance at the beginning and end of the movie in the Bernardo Bertolucci film adaptation of his novel The Sheltering Sky (1949) in 1990. Bowles music was mostly forgotten until the 1990s when a new generation of American musicians and singers became interested in it again. These charming, witty pieces are a treasure to be savored by art song enthusiasts.[31]

In 1995 Paul Bowles made a rare and final return to New York for a special Paul Bowles Festival celebrating his music at the Lincoln Center under the conductorship of Jonathan Sheffer with the Eos Orchestra[32] and later a symposium and interview held at the New School for Social Research.

Bowles was interviewed by Paul Theroux in 1994, documented in the last chapter of Theroux's travel book, The Pillars of Hercules.

In 1998, Bowles' wit and intellect remained as sharp as ever. He continued to welcome whomever turned up at his door into his apartment near the old American consulate in Tangier. However, on the advice of his doctors and friends, he began to limit interviews. One of his final reminisces about his literary life occurred during an interview with Stephen Morison, Jr., a frequent visitor and friend who was teaching at the American School of Tangier at the time. The interview was conducted on July 8, 1998 and appeared in the July/August 1999 issue of Poets & Writers Magazine. His final formal interview took place on 6th June 1999; it was conducted by Irene Herrmann, the executrix of the Paul Bowles Music Estate, focused on his musical career and was published in September 2003.[33]

Bowles died of heart failure at the Italian Hospital in Tangier on November 18, 1999 at the age of 88. He had been ill for some time with respiratory problems. His ashes were buried in Lakemont, New York, next to the graves of his parents and grandparents.

Paul Bowles and Tangier

Paul Bowles lived for 53 of his 88 years in Tangier. Not surprisingly, he became identified with the city: during his life visitors would seek him out, and on his death obituary-writers without fail linked his life to his residency: he became a symbolic American expatriate, and the city became the symbol of his expatriate status.

At the time of his first visit with Aaron Copland in 1931 Tangier had an anomalous status, a Moroccan city which was not Moroccan, with a population at once Berber, Arab, Spanish, and European, speaking Spanish, French, Berber and Arabic, under the control of a consortium of foreign powers, one of them the United States. Paul Bowles was entranced. On his return in 1947 the city had already changed, but not enough to rob it of its aura of strangeness and wonder. In 1955 there were anti-European riots, and in 1956 the city was returned to full Moroccan control.

Music

Paul Bowles' reputation as a composer was ultimately overshadowed by his writing. He studied with Aaron Copland. He wrote chamber music and incidental music for the stage. The score of his 1955 opera Yerma is especially memorable and gets much radio-play. He collected Moroccan folk music. His compositions are being re-released.

Writing

Paul Bowles' major works are his five novels and more than sixty short stories. He has been called an "American existentialist." He belonged to no movement or group, although his immediate contemporaries included Gore Vidal, Truman Capote and Tennessee Williams.

Bowles' recording of Moroccan music

Bowles was a pioneer in the field of North African ethnomusicology with his field recordings of traditional Moroccan music for the US Library of Congress.[34] The collection includes Gnawa music, dance music, secular music, music for Ramadan and other festivals, and music for animistic rituals. The motivation for the recordings was Bowles' realisation that modern culture would inevitably have an impact on traditional music. There was also a political element to his work, with Bowles commenting: "Instrumentalists and singers have come into being in lieu of chroniclers and poets, and even during the most recent chapter in the country's evolution - the war for independence and the setting up of the present regime - each phase of the struggle has been celebrated in song."[35] The total collection of this recorded music is known as "The Paul Bowles Collection" and is archived in the US Library of Congress, Reference No. 72-750123. The Archival Manuscript Material (Collection) contains 97 x 2 track 7" reel-to-reel tapes, containing approximately sixty hours of traditional folk, art and popular music, one two box of manuscripts, 18 photographs and a map along with the 2 LP recordings called 'Music of Morocco' (AFS L63-64).[36]

Bowles' translation of Moroccan authors

In the 1960s Bowles began translating stories from the oral tradition of native Moroccan storytellers. His most noteworthy collaborations included Mohammed Mrabet, Driss Ben Hamed Charhadi (Larbi Layachi), Mohamed Choukri, Abdeslam Boulaich, and Ahmed Yacoubi.

He also translated Rodrigo Rey Rosa, Jorge Luis Borges, Jean-Paul Sartre, Isabelle Eberhardt, Guy Frison-Roche, André Pieyre de Mandiargues, Ramon Gomez de la Serna, Giorgio de Chirico, Si Lakhdar, E. Laoust, Ramon Beteta, Gabino Chan, Bertrand Flornoy, Jean Ferry, Denise Moran, Paul Colinet, Paul Magritte, Popul Buj, Francis Ponge, Bluet d'Acheres and Ramon Sender

Achievement and legacy

Paul Bowles was one of the last surviving representatives of a generation of artists whose work has shaped 20th century literature and music.[37]In the Introduction to Bowles's "Collected Stories" (1979) Gore Vidal ranked his short stories "among the best ever written by an American," writing: the floor to this ramshackle civilization that we have built cannot bear much longer our weight. It was Bowles's genius to suggest the horrors which lie beneath that floor, as fragile, in its way, as the sky that shelters us from a devouring vastness".[38]

His music, in contrast, is "as full of light as the fiction [is] of dark...almost as if the composer were a totally different person from the writer."[39] During the early 1930s he studied composition (intermittently) with Aaron Copland; his music from this period "is reminiscent of Satie and Poulenc." Returning to New York in the mid-30s, he became one of the preeminent composers of American theater music, producing works for William Saroyan, Tennessee Williams, and others,[40] "show[ing] exceptional skill and imagination in capturing the mood, emotion, and ambience of each play to which he was assigned." In his own words, incidental music allowed Bowles to present "climaxless music, hypnotic music in one of the exact senses of the word, in that it makes its effect without the spectator being made aware of it.” At the same time he continued to write concert music, his style assimilating some of the melodic, rhythmic, and other stylistic elements of African, Mexican, and Central American music.[41]

In 1991 Paul Bowles was awarded the Rea Award for the Short Story, an award that is made annually "to a writer who has made a significant contribution to the short story as an art form". The jury gave the following citation: “Paul Bowles is a storyteller of the utmost purity and integrity. He writes of a world before God became man; a world in which men and women in extremis are seen as components in a larger, more elemental drama. His prose is crystalline and his voice unique. Among living American masters of the short story, Paul Bowles is sui generis.”[42] His works were added to the Library of America (aimed at preparing scholarly editions of American literary classics and keeping them permanently in print) in 2002.

Notes

  1. ^ a b Virginian Spencer Carr, University of Delaware Special Collections: Paul Bowles: An Introduction
  2. ^ a b c New York Times obituary for Paul Bowles, 19 November 1999
  3. ^ Allen Hibbard, "Paul Bowles: A Biographical Essay"
  4. ^ [Paul Bowles Music (page 43) Edited by Claudia Swan]
  5. ^ [In Touch: The Letters of Paul Bowles: Bowles letter to Edouard Roditi, Berlin, 9th June 1931]
  6. ^ "University of Delaware Library:Special Collections Department"
  7. ^ Book Factory, "Life and Works"
  8. ^ Holland, Patrick (2002). "Bowles, Paul", glbtq: An Encyclopedia of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Culture. Retrieved June 12, 2008.
  9. ^ Philip Ramey, "A Talk With Paul Bowles"
  10. ^ Carr.
  11. ^ ["Paul Bowles: The Complete Outsider" Interview with Catherine Warnow and Regina Weinreich/1988 Published in "Conversations with Paul Bowles" by Gena Dagel Caponi 1993, pages 214/215]
  12. ^ ["Paul Bowles in Exile" by Jay McInerney, Vanity Fair, September 1985]
  13. ^ ["Without Stopping" An Autobiography. Paul Bowles, page 275]
  14. ^ ["Without Stopping: An Autobiography" Paul Bowles, page 292]
  15. ^ ["Paul Bowles in Exile" Interview with Jay McInerney (1985) Published in "Conversations with Paul Bowles" by Gena Dagel Caponi 1993, page 188]
  16. ^ [Ibid: Page 19, Lehmann, 1949]
  17. ^ TIME magazine, December 1949
  18. ^ New York Times, December 4, 1949
  19. ^ ["Paul Bowles: A Descriptive Bibliography" by Jeffrey Miller]
  20. ^ ["A Descriptive Bibliography" by Jeffrey Miller, page 22.]
  21. ^ [The Paris Review Interviews: Paul Bowles, Page 190]
  22. ^ Paul Bowles: The Art of Fiction No. 67, The Paris Review, Issue 81, Fall 1981
  23. ^ [Ibid: dustwrapper info on first edition, Random House, 1955]
  24. ^ ["Their Heads are Green and Their Hands are Blue" (Random House, 1963): "The Rif to Music" pages 97 to 141]
  25. ^ [1]
  26. ^ ["Without Stopping" (Putnam, 1972): page 368]
  27. ^ [2] Placing the Placeless: A Conversation with Rodrigo Rey Rosa by Jeffrey Gray
  28. ^ [3] Letter from webmaster of the Estate of Paul Bowles to Lolita Lark
  29. ^ [4] Pinstripe Fedora: Issue #3
  30. ^ ["Paul Bowles: The Complete Outsider" Interview with Catherine Warnow and Regina Weinreich/1988 Published in "Conversations with Paul Bowles" by Gena Dagel Caponi 1993, page 217]
  31. ^ [5] Art Song of Williamsburg
  32. ^ [6] Jonathan Sheffer & the Eos Orchestra
  33. ^ [7] The last interview with Paul Bowles
  34. ^ The US Library of Congress Recordings were inaugurated to act as a "repository for ethnographic documentation appealing to folklorists and cultural documentarians working in this country and in foreign lands as well." Folklife Center News, Spring 2003, page 5
  35. ^ [Page 1 of a 9-page booklet contained within the double LP "Music of Morocco", AFS L63-64)]
  36. ^ Collections & Research Services: The Archive of Folk Culture
  37. ^ University of California, Berkeley Library, Biographies
  38. ^ Gore Vidal, Introduction to The Collected Stories, 1979, reprinted 1997.
  39. ^ Christopher Sawyer-Laucanno, "An Invisible Spectator: A Biography of Paul Bowles", (1999)
  40. ^ University of Delaware Library: Paul Bowles Collection
  41. ^ Paul Bowles, Biographical Dictionary of American Composers.
  42. ^ Rea Award for the Short Story

Notable works

In addition to his chamber and stage compositions Bowles published fourteen short story collections, three volumes of poetry, numerous translations, numerous travel articles, and an autobiography.

Music

  • 1931 - Sonata for Oboe and Clarinet
  • 1936 - Horse Eats Hat, play
  • 1936 - Who Fights This Battle, play
  • 1937 - Doctor Faustus, play
  • 1937 - Yankee Clipper, ballet
  • 1938 - Too Much Johnson, play
  • 1938 - Huapango - Cafe Sin Nombre - Huapango-El Sol, Latin American folk
  • 1939 - Denmark Vesy, opera
  • 1939 - My Heart's in the Highlands, play
  • 1940 - Loves Old Sweet Song, play
  • 1940 - Twelfth Night, play
  • 1941 - Liberty Jones, play
  • 1941 - Watch on the Rhine, play
  • 1941 - Love Like Wildfire, play
  • 1941 - Pastorela, ballet
  • 1942 - In Another Five Years Or So, opera
  • 1943 - South Pacific, play
  • 1943 - Sonata for Flute and Piano' and 'Two Mexican Dances'
  • 1943 - 'Tis Pity She's a Whore, play
  • 1944 - The Glass Managerie, play
  • 1944 - Jacobowsky and the Colonel, play
  • 1944 - Sentimental Colloquy, ballet
  • 1945 - Ondine, play
  • 1945 - Three, words by Tennessee Williams
  • 1945 - Three Pastoral Songs
  • 1946 - Night Without Sleep Words by Charles Henri Ford
  • 1946 - Cyrano de Bergerac, play
  • 1946 - The Dancer, play
  • 1946 - Land's End, play
  • 1946 - On Whitman Avenue, play
  • 1946 - Twilight Bar, play
  • 1946 - Cabin, words by Tennessee Williams, music by Paul Bowles
  • 1946 - Concerto for Two Pianos
  • 1947 - Sonata for Two Pianos
  • 1947 - Pastorela: First Suite, a ballet/opera in one act
  • 1947 - The Glass Menagerie, words by Tennessee Williams two songs by Bowles
  • 1948 - Concerto for Two Pianos, Winds and Percussion
  • 1948 - Summer and Smoke, play
  • 1949 - Night Waltz
  • 1953 - A Picnic Cantata
  • 1953 - In the Summer House, play
  • 1955 - Yerma, opera
  • 1958 - Edwin Booth, play
  • 1959 - Sweet Bird of Youth, play
  • 1962 - The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore, play
  • 1966 - Oedipus (Sophocles), play
  • 1967 - The Garden, play
  • 1969 - The Bacchae (Euripides), play
  • 1978 - Orestes, play
  • 1978 - Caligula (Camus), play
  • 1979 - Blue Mountain ballads, words by Tennessee Williams, music by Paul Bowles.
  • 1984 - Camp Cataract, play
  • 1984 - A Quarreling Pair, play

Fiction

  • Short stories (collections)
  • 1950 - A Little Stone
  • 1950 - The Delicate Prey and Other Stories
  • 1959 - The Hours after Noon
  • 1962 - A Hundred Camels in the Courtyard
  • 1967 - The Time of Friendship
  • 1968 - Pages from Cold Point and Other Stories
  • 1975 - Three Tales
  • 1977 - Things Gone & Things Still Here
  • 1979 - Collected Stories, 1939-1976
  • 1981 - In the Red Room
  • 1982 - Points in Time
  • 1985 - Midnight Mass
  • 1988 - Unwelcome Words: Seven Stories
  • 1988 - A Distant Episode
  • 1988 - Call at Corazon
  • 1989 - A Thousand Days for Mokhtar
  • 1995 - The Time of Friendship Paul Bowles & Vittorio Santoro
  • Poetry
  • 1933 - Two Poems
  • 1968 - Scenes
  • 1972 - The Thicket of Spring
  • 1981 - Next to Nothing: Collected Poems, 1926-1977
  • 1997 - No Eye Looked Out from Any Crevice

Translations

  • 1973 - For Bread Alone, by Mohamed Choukri
  • 1973 - Jean Genet in Tangier, by Mohamed Choukri
  • 1974 - The Boy Who Set the Fire, by Mohammed Mrabet
  • 1975 - Hadidan Aharam, by Mohammed Mrabet
  • 1975 - The Oblivion Seekers, by Isabelle Eberhardt
  • 1976 - Look & Move On, by [[Mohammed Mrabet
  • 1976 - Harmless Poisons, Blameless Sins, by Mohammed Mrabet
  • 1977 - The Big Mirror, by Mohammed Mrabet
  • 1979 - Tennessee Williams in Tangier, by Mohamed Choukri
  • 1979 - Five Eyes, by Abdeslam Boulaich, "Sheheriar and Sheherazade" Mohamed Choukri, "The Half Brothers" Larbi Layachi, "The Lute" Mohammed Mrabet, and "The Night Before Thinking" Ahmed Yacoubi
  • 1980 - The Beach Café & The Voice, by Mohammed Mrabet
  • 1982 - The Path Doubles Back, by Rodrigo Rey Rosa
  • 1983 - The Chest, by Mohammed Mrabet
  • 1983 - Allal, by Pociao
  • 1984 - The River Bed, by Rodrigo Rey Rosa, (a short story)
  • 1985 - She Woke Me Up So I Killed Her, [16 authors' short stories from various languages]
  • 1986 - Marriage With Papers, by Mohammed Mrabet
  • 1986 - Paul Bowles: Translations from the Moghrebi, by various authors]]
  • 1988 - The Beggar's Knife, by Rodrigo Rey Rosa
  • 1989 - Dust on Her Tongue, by Rodrigo Rey Rosa
  • 1990 - The Storyteller and the Fisherman, CD by Mohammed Mrabet
  • 1991 - The Pelcari Project, by Rodrigo Rey Rosa
  • 1991 - Tanger: Vues Choisies", by Jellel Gasteli
  • 1992 - Chocolate Creams and Dollars, by various authors
  • 2004 - Collected Stories, by Mohammed Mrabet

Travel, autobiography and letters

  • 1957 - Yallah, text by Paul Bowles, photos by Peter W. Haeberlin (travel)
  • 1963 - Their Heads are Green and Their Hands Are Blue (travel)
  • 1972 - Without stopping (autobiography)
  • 1990 - Two Years Beside The Strait (autobiography)
  • 1991 - Days: Tangier Journal (autobiography)
  • 1993 - 17, Quai Voltaire (autobiography of Paris, 1931,1932)
  • 1994 - Photographs (Paul Bowles & Simon Bischoff)
  • 1995 - In Touch - The Letters of Paul Bowles (edited by Jeffrey Miller)

Editions

Film appearances and interviews

  • Paul Bowles in Morocco (1970), produced and directed by Gary Conklin 57 minutes
  • Paul Bowles": South Bank Show London Studios (1988), produced by ITV, directed by Melvyn Bragg, 54 minutes
  • In 1990 Bernardo Bertolucci adapted The Sheltering Sky into a film in which Bowles has a cameo role and provides partial narration. 132 minutes
  • "Paul Bowles The Complete Outsider" 1993, by Catherine Hiller Marnow and Regina Weinreich 57 minutes.
  • "Halfmoon" 1995, four stories by Paul Bowles, Frieder Schlaich and Irenve von Alberti. First Run Features, 91 minutes
  • "Halbmond" 1995, German version of "Halfmoon", Frieder Schlaich and Irenve von Alberti. First Run Features, 90 minutes
  • "Let It Come Down" 1998, Requisite Productions, Zeitgeist Films, pub. 72 minutes, not rated. - this film is likely the definitive portrait of the author late in life. Directed by Jennifer Baichwal, includes footage of the final meeting between Bowles, William Burroughs, and Allen Ginsberg which took place in 1995 in New York. 72 minutes
  • "Night Waltz" 2002, Owsley Brown Film of the music of Paul Bowles, with Phillip Ramey and an Interview with Jonathan Sheffer, conductor of the Eos Orchestra. 77 minutes

References/further reading

Biographies and memoirs

Literary criticism on Paul Bowles

Published interviews with Paul Bowles

Catalog and archive editions on Paul Bowles

The Tangier of Paul Bowles

  • The Dream at the End of the World: Paul Bowles and the Literary Renegades in Tangier, Michelle Green (1991) ISBN 0-06-016571-5
  • Paul Bowles: Le Reclus de Tanger", Mohamed Choukri (1997)
  • Stars in the Firmament: Tangier Characters 1660-1960", David Woolman (1998) ISBN 1-57889-068-3
  • The Tangier Diaries", John Hopkins (1998) ISBN 932274-50-1-0

External links

Official website

Writing and music

Interviews with Paul Bowles

More interviews on the official Paul Bowles website

Assessments

Reviews and obituaries


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Paul Bowles biography from Who2.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Paul Bowles" Read more