The Posthumous Era Austin Wright died in 2003 at the age of 80. He had published seven novels and three critical books. His work received an enthusiastic reception but then sank out of sight. In 2010, however, Atlantic Books, in the UK, republished one of the novels, Tony and Susan, and, in 2011, this novel has been reissued by Grand Central Publishing in the US.
Austin Wright in the 1960s

Austin Wright and Tiger Stripey "Kitty" in the 1960s
Pages
Saturday, July 19, 2014
NEW: Essays from AMW's files.
TRAIN WATCHING AT WEST FALMOUTH
TRAIN WATCHING AT WEST FALMOUTH
When I was child in the 1920’s and 1930’s I went every summer to my grandmother’s house in West Falmouth on Cape Cod. We left New York by the Fall River Line and completed the journey by car or by train depending on whether we had a car that year or not. One of my great pleasures in those summers was watching the trains on the single track branch line of the New Haven that stopped at West Falmouth on its way to Woods Hole from Boston. It was an ideal small time railroad operation with stations three to four miles apart and just enough trains to make it interesting.
The place was wonderful for a child’s vacation: the beach, the house in the woods, the pretty village, the exciting larger villages of Falmouth and Woods Hole not far off. But the focus of my pleasure was the trains.
Saturday, August 27, 2011
From the Chicago Tribune
'Tony and Susan' by Austin Wright
This week's editors choice is 'Tony and Susan' by Austin Wright
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Saturday, August 6, 2011
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Ian McEwan mentions Tony & Susan in an interview
On the Leonard Lopate Show, 93.9 WNYC, Ian McEwan responds to this question:
What have you read or seen lately (book, film, play etc . . .) that moved or surprised you?
US novelist Austin Wright’s book Tony and Susan.
I'm pleased, I suppose, because I (KEW) really like Ian McEwan.
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)