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Transcendence for Beginners: by Clare Carlisle

Description:

Transcendence for Beginners examines life writing and philosophy across certain European and Indian traditions, exploring questions of childhood and mortality, art and religion, beauty and loss. Informed by her experience as a biographer of Søren Kierkegaard and George Eliot as well as her own life, Clare Carlisle asks what one human existence can reveal, and how writing can transmit its truth. Intellectually stimulating and deeply moving, Transcendence for Beginners enacts a philosophy of the heart, told by a generous and compelling guide. This bold, enlivening work asserts Carlisle’s place as one of our most innovative thinkers.


Review

‘We can make our own shape out of [Carlisle's] words because she is never dogmatic and because she is clearly on an open-ended quest herself. All possibilities remain alive in this subtle, generous and humane book.’
Sarah Bakewell, Guardian



‘Spanning continents and centuries, traversing mountains and seas, this expansive book asks what it means for a philosopher, or a biographer, to work from life. Carlisle’s beautiful prose fizzes with illuminating questions, stories and, above all, human connections, as she maps out a powerful and moving “philosophy of the heart.”’
― Francesca Wade, author of
Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife



‘This is the book of a lifetime, and a book about lifetimes. What is the relationship between philosophy and biography? How can a line of writing reveal a line of living? Clare Carlisle is a guide and a guru: Transcendence for Beginners is a transformative and transcending experience’
― Frances Wilson, author of
Electric Spark



‘A book of great intricacy and grace. Clare Carlisle is able to look upon the physics of literature, narrative and being as a scientist might look upon the constellations, giving us both understanding and wonder.’
― Jessica Au, author of
Cold Enough for Snow



‘In this elegant, eloquent, elegiac book, Clare Carlisle describes the movements of other lives, as well as those of her own life, that open paths to understanding what it means to live a life of devotion. This is philosophy as rigorously thought, but also as felt and lived. In an era marked by rampant cruelty and selfishness, Transcendence for Beginners offers its readers various modes of the radiant life, one that embraces joy but can also navigate loss and grief in that strange flux of being we call “time.”’
― Siri Hustvedt, author of
Mothers, Fathers and Others



‘A wide ranging and surprisingly moving examination of what it is to have, and live, a life.’
― Jessie Greengrass, author of
The High House



‘By taking the discussion on life-writing away from genre towards, instead, philosophical histories of the self, this book makes a powerful case for rethinking life-writing's significance. In the process, it both explores remembering and remembers, doing both with an often startling critical intelligence as well as with surprising emotional immediacy.’
― Amit Chaudhuri, author of
Sojourn



‘A work of thrilling lucidity and substance, on the singularity of lives and the value of life-writing, in which Clare Carlisle shows herself to be the most companionate of thinkers, gifted with uncommon modesty and intellectual grace. A book to read slowly, talk about, savour and learn from.’
― Claire Harman, author of
All Sorts of Lives



‘Transcendence for Beginners is a brilliant book – one of the most intelligent and sophisticated meditations on life-writing I’ve ever read, as well as a powerful demonstration of what the best life-writing can do in practice. Carlisle approaches this “humble literary genre” in the fullness of its ethical dimensions.’
― Edmund Gordon, author of
The Invention of Angela Carter



The Marriage Question already has the stamp of a classic and is bound to enter the canon of great biographies. I was amazed by the clarity of Clare Carlisle's language; she deals with the most complex ideas with miraculous ease. It was a delight to read while at the same time being deeply thought-provoking. I'm already looking forward to reading this magnificent book again.’
― Celia Paul, author of
Letters to Gwen John (praise for The Marriage Question)



‘Finally, Eliot has got the biographer she deserves, namely an ardent and eloquent feminist philosopher who shows us how and why Eliot's books, rightly read, are as philosophically profound as any treatise written by a man.’
― Stuart Jeffries,
Observer (praise for The Marriage Question)



‘Clare Carlisle's The Marriage Question is the best book I've read on George Eliot.’
― John Carey,
Sunday Times (praise for The Marriage Question)



‘Eloquent and original ... [Carlisle] combines a biographer’s eye for stories with a philosopher’s nose for questions.... Masterly and enriching.... The deal historian [of marriage] will need great tact and an impious curiosity. Carlisle has both.’
― James Wood,
New Yorker (praise for The Marriage Question)



‘In this thrilling book, the academic philosopher Clare Carlisle explores the novelist’s interrogation of “the double life”, meaning not only Eliot’s own 25 years of unsanctioned coupledom with Lewes, but also the difficult love relationships she unleashed on her heroines.... Carlisle speaks of wanting to employ biography as philosophical inquiry and here she succeeds magnificently. With great skill and delicacy she has filleted details from Eliot’s own life, read closely into her wonderful novels and, most importantly, considered the wider philosophical background in which she was operating.’
― Kathryn Hughes,
Guardian (praise for The Marriage Question)



‘This book manages to be both engrossing and rigorous, inhabiting an intimate and expansive vision of creativity and the lived life. Following the pulsing and ever-vital questions of love, desire, compromise and companionship, The Marriage Question is both a thrilling work on Eliot and a probing, illuminating reflection on modern love.’
― Seán Hewitt, author of
Open, Heaven (praise for The Marriage Question)

From the Back Cover

Transcendence for Beginners examines life writing and philosophy across certain European and Indian traditions, exploring questions of childhood and mortality, art and religion, beauty and loss. Informed by her experience as a biographer of Søren Kierkegaard and George Eliot as well as her own life, Clare Carlisle asks what one human existence can reveal, and how writing can transmit its truth. Intellectually stimulating and deeply moving, Transcendence for Beginners enacts a philosophy of the heart, told

Reviews:

4.0 out of 5 stars Engaging and accessible, humanly flawed like all of us

A.B. · 5 October 2025

Having enjoyed Clare Carlisle's books about Spinoza, George Eliot and Kierkegaard, it was interesting to read her reflections on life writing. There's a significant emphasis, though distanced, on her own life in writing of others' lives. As expected, she writes clearly and provides some interesting information along with plenty of opportunities for the reader to engage actively, reflect on aspects of their own life and how its contemplations may be framed. Much of her own framing takes us back to her work on the three earlier books, though Proust is added for consideration.The title refers, I think, to a point in the book where we are told that each generation, each person, must learn to love anew, from scratch, and love is a central word. There is a nice meditation about her own 'wavering' and, like any philosopher, pursuing rather than realising an ideal. It's all rather Platonic; it brought to (my) mind Iris Murdoch's sovereignty of good, but certainly it seems to be part of a tradition which is found in much philosophy and literature - and equally certainly not all philosophy or literature. It is a very personal take on aesthetics, ethics and the 'transcendent'.I struggled to trace a clear line around which I could recognise some texture, flavour, sense of what this transcendence is, how it coheres the text. There are places where this is suggested such as references to Spinoza's view that we are modes of God or Nature, this backed by reference to Eliot's Spinozist 'Middlemarch' through which, it is argued, the humblest, the most flawed of us are expressions of 'eternity'. This, though, for me anyway, gets lost in swirling references to 'eastern' spiritual traditions and figures, Christianity, the Jewish mysticism in 'Daniel Deronda', theosophy and more; from this emerges attention to devotion as a key concept, and interesting ideas that loss and waste in life are themselves manifestations of life's 'value' and this at the kernel of love.While I found much to engage with, and admire, I was slightly put off by a further swirl which is, for me, too dense a reliance on metaphors. While something like 'fluidity' must be apparent in the needs of the form, I felt I would be helped with occasional insertions of a more distanced, 'academic' voice. But it's success remains as life writing, and life writing beyond life writing.

Transcendence for Beginners: by Clare Carlisle

Product ID: K1804271950
Condition: New

4.6

AED8927

Price includes VAT & Import Duties
Type: Paperback
Availability: In Stock

Quantity:

|

Order today to get by 7-14 business days

Delivery fee of AED 20. Free for orders above AED 200.

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Imported From: United Kingdom

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Transcendence for Beginners: by Clare Carlisle

Product ID: K1804271950
Condition: New

4.6

Transcendence for Beginners: by Clare Carlisle-0
Type: Paperback

AED8927

Price includes VAT & Import Duties
Availability: In Stock

Quantity:

|

Order today to get by 7-14 business days

Delivery fee of AED 20. Free for orders above AED 200.

Returns & Warranty policies

Imported From: United Kingdom

At BOLO, we work hard to ensure the products you receive are new, genuine, and sourced from reputable suppliers.

BOLO is not an authorized or official retailer for most brands, nor are we affiliated with manufacturers unless specifically stated on a product page. Instead, we source verified sellers, authorized distributors or directly from the manufacturer.

Each product undergoes thorough inspection and verification at our consolidation and fulfilment centers to ensure it meets our strict authenticity and quality standards before being shipped and delivered to you.

If you ever have concerns regarding the authenticity of a product purchased from us, please contact Bolo Support. We will review your inquiry promptly and, if necessary, provide documentation verifying authenticity or offer a suitable resolution.

Your trust is our top priority, and we are committed to maintaining transparency and integrity in every transaction.

All product information, images, descriptions, and reviews originate from the manufacturer or from trusted sellers overseas. BOLO is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or an authorized retailer for most brands listed on our website unless stated otherwise.

While we strive to display accurate information, variations in packaging, labeling, instructions, or formulation may occasionally occur due to regional differences or supplier updates. For detailed or manufacturer-specific information, please contact the brand directly or reach out to BOLO Support for assistance.

Unless otherwise stated, all prices displayed on the product page include applicable taxes and import duties.

BOLO operates in accordance with the laws and regulations of United Arab Emirates. Any items found to be restricted or prohibited for sale within the UAE will be cancelled prior to shipment. We take proactive measures to ensure that only products permitted for sale in United Arab Emirates are listed on our website.

All items are shipped by air, and any products classified as “Dangerous Goods (DG)” under IATA regulations will be removed from the order and cancelled.

All orders are processed manually, and we make every effort to process them promptly once confirmed. Products cancelled due to the above reasons will be permanently removed from listings across the website.

Description:

Transcendence for Beginners examines life writing and philosophy across certain European and Indian traditions, exploring questions of childhood and mortality, art and religion, beauty and loss. Informed by her experience as a biographer of Søren Kierkegaard and George Eliot as well as her own life, Clare Carlisle asks what one human existence can reveal, and how writing can transmit its truth. Intellectually stimulating and deeply moving, Transcendence for Beginners enacts a philosophy of the heart, told by a generous and compelling guide. This bold, enlivening work asserts Carlisle’s place as one of our most innovative thinkers.


Review

‘We can make our own shape out of [Carlisle's] words because she is never dogmatic and because she is clearly on an open-ended quest herself. All possibilities remain alive in this subtle, generous and humane book.’
Sarah Bakewell, Guardian



‘Spanning continents and centuries, traversing mountains and seas, this expansive book asks what it means for a philosopher, or a biographer, to work from life. Carlisle’s beautiful prose fizzes with illuminating questions, stories and, above all, human connections, as she maps out a powerful and moving “philosophy of the heart.”’
― Francesca Wade, author of
Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife



‘This is the book of a lifetime, and a book about lifetimes. What is the relationship between philosophy and biography? How can a line of writing reveal a line of living? Clare Carlisle is a guide and a guru: Transcendence for Beginners is a transformative and transcending experience’
― Frances Wilson, author of
Electric Spark



‘A book of great intricacy and grace. Clare Carlisle is able to look upon the physics of literature, narrative and being as a scientist might look upon the constellations, giving us both understanding and wonder.’
― Jessica Au, author of
Cold Enough for Snow



‘In this elegant, eloquent, elegiac book, Clare Carlisle describes the movements of other lives, as well as those of her own life, that open paths to understanding what it means to live a life of devotion. This is philosophy as rigorously thought, but also as felt and lived. In an era marked by rampant cruelty and selfishness, Transcendence for Beginners offers its readers various modes of the radiant life, one that embraces joy but can also navigate loss and grief in that strange flux of being we call “time.”’
― Siri Hustvedt, author of
Mothers, Fathers and Others



‘A wide ranging and surprisingly moving examination of what it is to have, and live, a life.’
― Jessie Greengrass, author of
The High House



‘By taking the discussion on life-writing away from genre towards, instead, philosophical histories of the self, this book makes a powerful case for rethinking life-writing's significance. In the process, it both explores remembering and remembers, doing both with an often startling critical intelligence as well as with surprising emotional immediacy.’
― Amit Chaudhuri, author of
Sojourn



‘A work of thrilling lucidity and substance, on the singularity of lives and the value of life-writing, in which Clare Carlisle shows herself to be the most companionate of thinkers, gifted with uncommon modesty and intellectual grace. A book to read slowly, talk about, savour and learn from.’
― Claire Harman, author of
All Sorts of Lives



‘Transcendence for Beginners is a brilliant book – one of the most intelligent and sophisticated meditations on life-writing I’ve ever read, as well as a powerful demonstration of what the best life-writing can do in practice. Carlisle approaches this “humble literary genre” in the fullness of its ethical dimensions.’
― Edmund Gordon, author of
The Invention of Angela Carter



The Marriage Question already has the stamp of a classic and is bound to enter the canon of great biographies. I was amazed by the clarity of Clare Carlisle's language; she deals with the most complex ideas with miraculous ease. It was a delight to read while at the same time being deeply thought-provoking. I'm already looking forward to reading this magnificent book again.’
― Celia Paul, author of
Letters to Gwen John (praise for The Marriage Question)



‘Finally, Eliot has got the biographer she deserves, namely an ardent and eloquent feminist philosopher who shows us how and why Eliot's books, rightly read, are as philosophically profound as any treatise written by a man.’
― Stuart Jeffries,
Observer (praise for The Marriage Question)



‘Clare Carlisle's The Marriage Question is the best book I've read on George Eliot.’
― John Carey,
Sunday Times (praise for The Marriage Question)



‘Eloquent and original ... [Carlisle] combines a biographer’s eye for stories with a philosopher’s nose for questions.... Masterly and enriching.... The deal historian [of marriage] will need great tact and an impious curiosity. Carlisle has both.’
― James Wood,
New Yorker (praise for The Marriage Question)



‘In this thrilling book, the academic philosopher Clare Carlisle explores the novelist’s interrogation of “the double life”, meaning not only Eliot’s own 25 years of unsanctioned coupledom with Lewes, but also the difficult love relationships she unleashed on her heroines.... Carlisle speaks of wanting to employ biography as philosophical inquiry and here she succeeds magnificently. With great skill and delicacy she has filleted details from Eliot’s own life, read closely into her wonderful novels and, most importantly, considered the wider philosophical background in which she was operating.’
― Kathryn Hughes,
Guardian (praise for The Marriage Question)



‘This book manages to be both engrossing and rigorous, inhabiting an intimate and expansive vision of creativity and the lived life. Following the pulsing and ever-vital questions of love, desire, compromise and companionship, The Marriage Question is both a thrilling work on Eliot and a probing, illuminating reflection on modern love.’
― Seán Hewitt, author of
Open, Heaven (praise for The Marriage Question)

From the Back Cover

Transcendence for Beginners examines life writing and philosophy across certain European and Indian traditions, exploring questions of childhood and mortality, art and religion, beauty and loss. Informed by her experience as a biographer of Søren Kierkegaard and George Eliot as well as her own life, Clare Carlisle asks what one human existence can reveal, and how writing can transmit its truth. Intellectually stimulating and deeply moving, Transcendence for Beginners enacts a philosophy of the heart, told

Reviews:

4.0 out of 5 stars Engaging and accessible, humanly flawed like all of us

A.B. · 5 October 2025

Having enjoyed Clare Carlisle's books about Spinoza, George Eliot and Kierkegaard, it was interesting to read her reflections on life writing. There's a significant emphasis, though distanced, on her own life in writing of others' lives. As expected, she writes clearly and provides some interesting information along with plenty of opportunities for the reader to engage actively, reflect on aspects of their own life and how its contemplations may be framed. Much of her own framing takes us back to her work on the three earlier books, though Proust is added for consideration.The title refers, I think, to a point in the book where we are told that each generation, each person, must learn to love anew, from scratch, and love is a central word. There is a nice meditation about her own 'wavering' and, like any philosopher, pursuing rather than realising an ideal. It's all rather Platonic; it brought to (my) mind Iris Murdoch's sovereignty of good, but certainly it seems to be part of a tradition which is found in much philosophy and literature - and equally certainly not all philosophy or literature. It is a very personal take on aesthetics, ethics and the 'transcendent'.I struggled to trace a clear line around which I could recognise some texture, flavour, sense of what this transcendence is, how it coheres the text. There are places where this is suggested such as references to Spinoza's view that we are modes of God or Nature, this backed by reference to Eliot's Spinozist 'Middlemarch' through which, it is argued, the humblest, the most flawed of us are expressions of 'eternity'. This, though, for me anyway, gets lost in swirling references to 'eastern' spiritual traditions and figures, Christianity, the Jewish mysticism in 'Daniel Deronda', theosophy and more; from this emerges attention to devotion as a key concept, and interesting ideas that loss and waste in life are themselves manifestations of life's 'value' and this at the kernel of love.While I found much to engage with, and admire, I was slightly put off by a further swirl which is, for me, too dense a reliance on metaphors. While something like 'fluidity' must be apparent in the needs of the form, I felt I would be helped with occasional insertions of a more distanced, 'academic' voice. But it's success remains as life writing, and life writing beyond life writing.

Similar suggestions by Bolo

More from this brand

Similar items from “Philosophy”