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Joyce Carol Oates

Letters to a Biographer

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

This rich compilation of Joyce Carol Oates's letters across four decades displays her warmth and generosity, her droll and sometimes wicked sense of humor, her phenomenal energy, and most of all, her mastery of the lost art of letter writing.

"It's hard to think of another writer with as fecund and protean an imagination as the eighty-five-year-old Joyce Carol Oates, who is surely on any short list of America's greatest living writers." —New York Times Magazine

In this generous selection of Joyce Carol Oates's letters to her biographer and friend Greg Johnson, readers will discover a never-before-seen dimension of her phenomenal talent.

In 1975, when Johnson was a graduate student, he first wrote to Oates, already a world-famous author, and drew an appreciative, empathetic response. Soon the two began a fairly intense, largely epistolary friendship that would last until the present day. As time passed, letters became faxes, and faxes became emails, but the energy and vividness of Oates's writing never abated. Her letters were often sprinkled with the names of well-known public figures, from John Updike and Toni Morrison to Steve Martin and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. There are also descriptions of far-flung travels she undertook with her first husband, the scholar and editor Raymond Smith, and with her second, the distinguished Princeton neuroscientist Charlie Gross. But much of Oates's prose centered on the pleasures of her home life, including her pet cats and the wildlife outside her study window.

Whereas her academic essays and book reviews are eloquent in a formal manner, in these letters she is wholly relaxed, even when she is serious in her concerns. Like Johnson, she was always engaged in work, whether a long novel or a brief essay, and the letters give a fascinating glimpse into Oates's writing practice.

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    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2023
      A collection of letters invites readers into the prolific author's life and thoughts. Oates generously wrote an introduction to Johnson's selected letters from her, describing a "remarkable collection of prolonged glances into the past, bathed in a sort of warm convivial glow." Johnson, who's published multiple books of fiction and nonfiction, including an authorized biography of Oates, first wrote to her from college in 1975. She was supportive of his writing, even offering to write letters of recommendation, and they eventually became good friends. Throughout, Oates displays her witty, humorous, and sly style. In a letter from 1987, she writes about her "adventure" publishing a novel under a pseudonym, desirous of an undetectable "new identity." Elsewhere, she seeks advice about her work and critiques Johnson's stories. Oates describes herself as "inward, secretive, and obsessive," noting later, "I seem always to have loved to write--shamelessly. But at such length!" In addition to novels and short stories, she discusses her "other" career as a playwright. Composing a play about Thoreau "was one of the most fascinating and haunting periods of writing I've ever experienced!" She believes John Updike wasted his "brilliant" prose on unworthy characters, and Sense and Sensibility is "slow, dull, didactic, and unsparkling." Wuthering Heights, on the other hand, is "simply sui generis." Oates is happy that her Princeton colleague Toni Morrison won the Nobel Prize, and she writes at length about pets, book covers, literary gossip, and her love of boxing. On the writing process, she notes, "Anything is easier than the first six weeks or so of a novel!" In the last letter--from December 26, 2006--Oates mentions an upcoming "elegant" New Year's Eve party at Steve Martin's apartment in New York City. An interesting barometer of Oates' development as a writer over 30 years.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 29, 2024
      Novelist Johnson (Night Journey)—who published Invisible Writer, an authorized biography of Oates, in 1998—brings together an inviting compendium of his correspondence with the National Book Award winner from 1975 to 2006. Johnson first reached out to Oates in 1975 to express his admiration for her short story collection, The Poisoned Kiss, and what began as a cordial correspondence transformed over the ensuing years into a close friendship. The letters offer insights into Oates’s views on her fiction and the process of writing; for example, a 1999 message likens the process of cutting down the original 1,400-page manuscript for Blonde to “yank out weeds from a garden.” Other selections delve into Oates’s personal life, particularly the poignant letters tracing the declining health and deaths of her parents in the early 2000s. Literary gossip hounds will appreciate some choice tidbits sprinkled throughout (Oates credits Philip Roth’s late-’90s resurgence to the free time he enjoyed after alienating “virtually all” of his friends and lovers), but readers’ attention will flag during the surfeit of messages about Johnson’s fiction. Still, Oates’s fans will enjoy this intimate glimpse inside her life. Agent: Warren Frazier, John Hawkins & Assoc.

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