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Jean W. Cash

Auteur de Flannery O'Connor: A Life

5 oeuvres 58 utilisateurs 3 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Jean W. Cash is professor of English at James Madison University.

Œuvres de Jean W. Cash

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At times the initials and various other clarifications captured, like (LB to SR) and the like, would throw off the flow while reading this biography, but overall, I loved it.

It's a crying shame he's gone.
 
Signalé
DonnaEverhart | 1 autre critique | Oct 27, 2015 |
Larry Brown: A Writer’s Life is a fully engaging biography not only because Brown is a fascinating subject, but also because the writing is precise, engaging, and never flags. Jean W. Cash follows Brown’s life from boyhood to his struggles in becoming a published writer, attaining his goals and then some, death, and even beyond.

Despite Brown’s humble background and the odds against it, he never lost the extraordinary drive and determination that led him from life as a firefighter to success as a writer. Cash doesn’t shy away from the realities of Brown’s life such as his alcoholism, infidelities and near-constant money woes. Like Gary Hawkins excellent documentary The Rough South of Larry Brown, Cash also details the affect Brown’s writing and success had on his wife and family.

Success came with a price. Brown came to distrust the publishing business and disliked the constant pressure for the next book. He “felt a bit sharecropped at times.” He also came to dread teaching because of the time it took from writing, but came to depend on the money teaching provided. Touring and speaking to support his books also took him away from his family and cut into his writing time.

The underlying sadness on every page of this biography is in knowing that Brown died way too young in 2004. At least he was home in his beloved Mississippi, the place that supplied the characters and material for all of his books and stories.
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Hagelstein | 1 autre critique | Dec 10, 2013 |
Flannery O'Connor is arguably one of the most important writers of the twentieth century. She was passionately Southern and passionately Catholic, dedicated to her craft and a consummate professional.
This is why I think she would have scorned her recent biography, written by Jean Cash.

Cash's work is merely competent. She has all the facts straight. The book is well-researched, and well documented. Cash has flipped over every O'Connor stone, but there are so few unpublished gems at this point, that the project seems to be simply one of repetition.

What makes Cash's biography especially defective is that she seems afraid to make qualitative judgments regarding O'Connor or her work. I suppose this can be good in other biographies of lesser-known literary figures. The biography falls short, in other words, precisely because of its attention to detail, and its lack of synthesis. There are times when it reads like a shopping list of O'Connor things, places, friends and relatives. Cash's prose falls lifeless into the annals of poorly-written biographies.

I only recall Cash voicing her opinion three times. She defends O'Connor's relationship with Maryat Lee as a perfectly heterosexual one. On another occasion, she defends O'Connor, who, throughout her life and private letters, made a few controversial statements regarding the Civil Rights movement: these have since tagged her as racist to some scholars. Cash also frequently asserts that O'Connor was not a reclusive person, a kind of 1950s Emily Dickenson. Of these assertions, only the second seems to have any direct bearing on her writing. It seems that her focus should have been directed to other facets of O'Connor's life.

Cash's thoughts often read like terse journal articles that have been assembled into a book as an afterthought. It is sometimes difficult to read her rather fibrous prose, which fails to synthesize multiple tellings of any particular O'Connor account into a single cohesive narrative.

Robert Fitzgerald's introduction to _Everything That Rises Must Converge_ accomplishes in about 25 pages what took Cash over 300. Besides, Fitzgerald's introduction was written by somebody who knew O'Connor, and who considered her family. But the best part about buying _Everything that Rises..._ is that instead of being forced to read a synthesis of quotes, the reader can actually look at 9 pieces of O'Connor's short fiction.
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Signalé
bjanecarp | Apr 6, 2011 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
5
Membres
58
Popularité
#284,346
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
3
ISBN
12

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