Sarah Bakewell Explained

Sarah Bakewell
Birth Place:Bournemouth, England
Occupation:Writer
Notableworks:How to Live, At the Existentialist Cafe

Sarah Bakewell (born 1963) is a British author and professor. She lives in London.[1] She received the Windham–Campbell Literature Prize in Non-Fiction.

Early life

Bakewell was born in the seaside town of Bournemouth, England, where her parents ran a small hotel.[1] When she was five, the family began travelling through India in a camper and continued to do so for two years before settling in Sydney, Australia. There, her father worked as a bookseller and her mother worked as a librarian.[1] As a child, she often wrote, and spent some of her young adulthood working in bookstores.[2]

Bakewell studied philosophy at the University of Essex in England. She embarked on a PhD on philosopher Martin Heidegger, but gave it up to move to London, where she initially found work at a tea-bag factory.[3] Bakewell later completed a post-graduate degree on Artificial Intelligence.

Career

Bakewell began writing again during her job at the Wellcome Library in London as a curator of early printed books, which she began in the early 1990s. She spent a decade at the library, where she came across interesting historical fragments and a pamphlet that would inspire her first book.

The Smart, Bakewell's first book, related the story of an 18th-century forgery trial she came across in the Wellcome collection. In 2002, she quit this job to devote more energy to writing. She published The English Dane, the biography of Danish revolutionary and explorer Jørgen Jørgensen, in 2005.

From 2008 to 2010, Bakewell worked as a part-time cataloger of rare books for the National Trust, cataloging historical book collections around England. In 2010 she published How to Live, a biography of 16th century essayist Michel Eyquem de Montaigne.[4] The book received rave reviews, with The Guardian calling it a "superb, spirited introduction to the master."

Bakewell published At the Existentialist Café: Freedom, Being, and Apricot Cocktails in 2016, a biography of the existentialist movement and its leaders Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Albert Camus.[5] Bakewell was drawn to the existentialist movement at a young age; at age 16, she used some of her birthday money to buy a copy of Sartre's Nausea (1938). Bakewell inserted this personal angle into the work; The New York Times critic Janet Maslin wrote, "As someone who came back to this material by rereading it later in life, she has made her responses part of the story." At the Existentialist Café was named one of the Ten Best Books of 2016 by The New York Times.[6]

Awards and honours

Works

Notes and References

  1. News: Conversation Across Centuries With the Father of All Bloggers. Patricia. Cohen. 17 December 2010. The New York Times. 9 July 2012.
  2. Web site: Blog Archive » Meet Sarah Bakewell. Other Press. 2012-07-09.
  3. Web site: About. 2013-09-28. Sarah Bakewell. en. 2019-08-04.
  4. News: Adam . Thorpe . How to Live by Sarah Bakewell | Book review | Books . The Guardian . 16 January 2010. 9 July 2012 . London.
  5. News: Review: In Sarah Bakewell's 'At the Existentialist Café,' Nothingness Has a Certain Something. Maslin. Janet. 2016-03-02. The New York Times. 2019-08-04. en-US. 0362-4331.
  6. News: The 10 Best Books of 2016. 2016-12-01. The New York Times. 2019-08-04. en-US. 0362-4331.
  7. Web site: Humanist history takes centre stage as Sarah Bakewell awarded Rosalind Franklin Medal. 2024-01-24. 2023-03-09. Humanists UK.
  8. News: Yale awards eight writers $165,000 Windham-Campbell Prizes. 2018-03-07. YaleNews. 2018-03-07. en.
  9. News: Schuessler . Jennifer . 2023-04-02 . For Sarah Bakewell, Nothing Human is Alien . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-06-22 . 0362-4331.
  10. News: Apr 10, 2023 . Sarah Bakewell's 'Humanly Possible' recounts centuries of humanism . The Washington Post .
  11. News: O'Grady . Jane . 2023-03-24 . Humanly Possible by Sarah Bakewell review – the meaning of humanism . en-GB . The Guardian . 2023-06-22 . 0261-3077.
  12. News: Szalai . Jennifer . 2023-03-29 . The Tricky Thing With Humanism, This Book Implies, Is Humans . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-06-22 . 0362-4331.
  13. News: Apr 1, 2023 . Sarah Bakewell on the enduring influence of humanist thought — from the Renaissance to today . CBC .
  14. Ruth Scurr, 'How to Live: A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer by Sarah Bakewell', The Observer, 24 January 2010. Retrieved 13 June 2012.
  15. Michael Bywater, 'How to Live, By Sarah Bakewell', The Independent, 29 January 2010. Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  16. https://web.archive.org/web/20081219185409/http://www.bookcritics.org/awards/past_awards/#2010 Awards All Past National Book Critics Circle Award Winners and Finalists