Married to Genius
A fascinating insight into the married lives of nine modern writers.
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
April 4, 2005
Biographer Meyers delves into the married lives of nine novelists-Tolstoy, Shaw, Conrad, Joyce, Woolf, Mansfield, Lawrence, Hemingway and Fitzgerald-bypassing the daily bric-a-brac of marriage to focus on the artists' intertwined commitments to their spouses and their craft, often drawing parallels between the fiction written and the lives lived. Meyers suggests marriage for his subjects was a "strengthening bond... deeply valuable to an artist engaged in psychic survival and in creating order out of chaos," but it is clear that even the happiest marriages came at a price. Meyers uses the diaries, letters and fiction of his subjects and their peers to cover the legendary aspects of their biographies (Conrad's estrangement, Woolf's mental fragility, Fitzgerald's alcoholism, Hemingway's machismo) in satisfying, psychologically incisive detail without risking caricature, and is able to provide a revealing portrait of what made Tolstoy's marriage "unhappy after its own fashion," and why Woolf wrote in a suicide note to Leonard, "I don't think that two people could be happier than we have been." Readers familiar with the works of these figures will take pleasure in the sometimes subtle links Meyers notes between their life and art. What's more, Meyers takes full advantage of the fascinating intersections between these literary figures' lives-Mansfield's husband Murry's flirtation with Lawrence's wife Freida; Hemingway and Fitzgerald's judgments (sometimes discerning, sometimes clearly blurred with jealousy) of each other's marriages; Woolf's envy of Mansfield's writing; and Mansfield's envy of Woolf's marriage-to enrich the volume.
November 1, 2005
Marriage is a fascinating topic, and who among us is immune to the allure of biographical voyeurism? Meyers ("Gary Cooper: An American Hero") studies the marriages of nine modern writers -Leo Tolstoy, George Bernard Shaw, Joseph Conrad, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Katherine Mansfield, D.H. Lawrence, Ernest Hemingway, and F. Scott Fitzgerald -in an attempt to draw a connection between artistic commitment and marital stability. Using Jungian psychology as a touchstone, he argues not that marital conflict was inevitable, with the artist's temperament forever compromised by devotion to his or her craft, but that these artists were sustained by the love of their spouses and inspired by the conflict of marriage. Much has been written about these writers and their respective partners, but Meyers aims for precision, using material taken predominantly from letters, journals, and biographies by family members instead of relying on the more recent scholarly biographies. Though his argument remains speculative, he offers an interesting series of well-written sketches on the role of marriage in an artist's life. Recommended for academic libraries as interest warrants." -Pam Kingsbury, Univ. of North Alabama, Florence"
Copyright 2005 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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