(Report repeated from p. 130 when scheduled for earlier publication): ""This is the first full length biography of Thomas...

READ REVIEW

THOMAS WOLFE

(Report repeated from p. 130 when scheduled for earlier publication): ""This is the first full length biography of Thomas Wolfe, by his literary agent during the last years of his life. She has brought judgment, discernment and sympathy to a fairly long and conscientious account. One criticism that might be levelled is that she has fallen under the spell of her subject. For the truth of the matter is what one has always suspected -- Thomas Wolfe was not a very interesting young man and he led a really very dull life. By means of his anger-heated imagination and emotional gigantism he managed to blow up the facts of a very commonplace American childhood, a regular education at Chapel Hill and Harvard, a love affair, some European travel and a good deal of drinking into what people mistook for genius. This book is a revelation of the American schizophrenia: on the one hand, the conformist, organizational man; on the other the ""sensitive spirit"", the drunk, the manic depressive- but we are a long way from finding the responsible artist. And we are left to wonder whether we were fooled by Wolfe's literary contribution and enduring interest today."" As mid-summer selection by B-O-M it will reach a materially wider audience.

Pub Date: N/A

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: -

Publisher: Doubleday

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 1960

Close Quickview