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House by the Sea
House by the Sea
Author: May Sarton
A poet and novelist tells of moving from her New Hampshire village home to a seacoast home in Maine. — In 1973, May Sarton moved from the inland New Hampshire home which had been the scene of the creative and inner life she so powerfully probed in both Plant Dreaming Deep and Journal of a...  more » Solitude. She went then to a house on the seacoast of Maine. It was a place that was alone in all but a few months in summer, with the sea and the woods, and a wide sky ever present.

At first, the peace of this place and the escape from the personal anguish she had come to associate with her New Hampshire home seemed to have its own dark side. As she says, "I became haunted by something I read years ago to the effect that when the Japanese were in a period of peace they painted only fans."

But the creative passion returned and she discovered that what she has to give does not depend on others, and for the creative spirit that it is a discovery of rare value. "Solitude," she writes, "like a long love, deepens with time, and I trust, will not fail me as my own powers of creation diminish. For growing into solitude is one way of growing to the end."

May Sarton is the author of twelve volumes of poetry, sixteen novels, and five books of nonfiction, including Journal of a Solitude and A World of Light. She lives in York, Maine.
ISBN-13: 9780393000696
ISBN-10: 0393000699
Publication Date: 11/1981
Pages: 287
Rating:
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
 10

4.2 stars, based on 10 ratings
Publisher: W W Norton Co Inc
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 3
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed House by the Sea on + 293 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
I discovered May Sarton totally by accident and have now received a number of her books. This is a journal written by her after her move from a small town in NH to her "House by the Sea". A look into what is the daily life of a writer but full of interesting facts, people, names. I really enjoy her and will be getting more, more, more.
reviewed House by the Sea on + 225 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
In 1973, May Sarton moved from the inland New Hampshire home which had been the scene of the creative and inner life she so powerfully probed in both Plant Dreaming and Journal of a Solitude. She went then to a house on the seacoast of Maine. It was a place that was alone in all but a few months in summer, with the sea and the woods, and a wide sky every present.
At first, the peace of this place and the escape from the personal anguish she has come to associate with her New Hampshire home seemed to have its own dark side. As she says, "I became haunted by something I read years ago to the effect that when the Japanese were in a period of peace they painted only fans."
But the creative passion returned and she discovered that what she has to give not depend on others, and for the creative spirit that is a discovery of rare value. "Solitude," she writes, "like a long love, deepens with time, and I trust, will not fail me as my own loves, deepens with time, and I trust, will not fail me as my own powers of creation diminish. For growing into solitude is one way of growing to the end."
Read All 3 Book Reviews of "House by the Sea"


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