Bellow's relations with women were often fraught. In the 1960s he was compulsively promiscuous (even as he inveighed against sexual liberation). The women he pursued, the ones he married and those with whom he had affairs, were intelligent, attractive and strong-willed. At eighty-five he fathered his fourth child, a daughter, with his fifth wife. His three sons, whom he loved, could be as volatile as he was, and their relations with their father were often troubled.
Although an early and engaged supporter of civil rights, in the second half of his life Bellow was angered by the excesses of Black Power. An opponent of cultural relativism, he exercised great influence in literary and intellectual circles, advising a host of institutes and foundations, helping those he approved of, hindering those of whom he disapproved. In making his case, he could be cutting and rude; he could also be charming, loyal, and funny. Bellow's heroic energy and will are clear to the very end of his life. His immense achievement and its cost, to himself and others, are also clear.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
November 6, 2018 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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- ISBN: 9781101875179
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- ISBN: 9781101875179
- File size: 92275 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
Starred review from August 27, 2018
This masterful account of the second half of Bellow’s life from Leader (The Life of Saul Bellow: To Fame and Fortune 1915–1964) is impressive in both content and accessibility. The biography opens at an exciting point: Bellow, with the publication of the bestselling and critically acclaimed Herzog, catapults to the highest echelons of literary success. Leader combines Bellow’s life story with close readings of his major (and sometimes minor) texts, highlighting the autobiographical content of Bellow’s fiction. Although generous to Bellow, Leader shows the highly flawed person existing alongside the great writer. The book depicts a man caught up in mid-century notions of masculinity, displaying a volatile temper, expecting women to wait on him, and flaunting his dominance. While garnering an array of literary honors—National Book Awards, the Pulitzer Prize, and the Nobel—Bellow continually disappoints his children and friends, and careens from affair to affair and marriage to marriage. Yet Leader has a talent for finding the redeeming details that humanize Bellow—consideration to his assistant Mrs. Corbin; affection toward his only daughter, Naomi Rose, born when he was 84, five years before he died. Leader succeeds because his book never bogs down: despite its almost 800 pages, Leader knows when to move on, producing a compulsively readable biography. -
Kirkus
September 1, 2018
Leader (English Literature/Roehampton Univ.) concludes his exemplary life of the famed Canadian-American writer whose literary successes were matched by familial psychodramas, feuds, and other such mishegoss.As the author picks up from The Life of Saul Bellow: To Fame and Fortune, 1915-1964 (2015), the subject of his biography has attained great fame and fortune. Henderson the Rain King (1959) has had five years to make waves, building on earlier books such as The Adventures of Augie March and Dangling Man, and now Herzog (1964) is out, nearly universally hailed and climbing the charts, "supplanting John Le Carré's The Spy Who Came in from the Cold" on the bestseller lists. At the time, however, Bellow was not satisfied. Having established himself as a top-flight novelist, he tried his hand at a play that ran for only a month and received some of the toughest reviews of his career, along with a note from Lillian Hellman that Bellow summarized as "I've written a lot of interesting soliloquies, but there's not a play in sight." Undaunted, Bellow returned to prose with a vengeance, putting into practice his pronounced habit of taking every element from real life and conversation and working it into his fictional narratives. Leader ably charts Bellow's continuing evolution as a writer, which will cheer his fans: Bellow matched talent, after all, with an impressive work ethic. Less cheering are his relationships with children, lovers, and spouses, all of which involved considerable drama and, even on his deathbed, shouting and recriminations. His cantankerousness punctuates almost every page, as when he explodes in anger over a companion's going off to see a popular movie while he attended his son's wedding: "By eroding the standards of a wide literate audience," Leader glosses, "M*A*S*H was debasing as well as debased." Always hard at work and always in battle mode, Bellow emerges as a brilliant writer who never minded being disliked--and offered many reasons to do so.Though sometimes overly detailed, this is a top-notch exploration of one of the most important midcentury writers.COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Booklist
Starred review from November 15, 2018
Martin Amis hailed fellow novelist Saul Bellow as the writer who made the higher autobiography of his fiction resonate more memorably than [the work] of any living writer. In this second volume of his definitive biography of Bellow, Leader illuminates both Bellow's remarkable personal experiences during his last four decades and the astonishing literary resonance of those imaginatively rewrought experiences. Readers see, for instance, how Bellow's tense campus confrontation with a student heckler becomes a pivotal episode in Mr. Sammler's Planet, how the horrific crime Bellow witnesses in Chicago informs the bestial violence pervading The Dean's December, and how the personal inspiration Bellow draws from spiritualist Owen Barfield animates Charlie's upper wakefulness in Humboldt's Gift. Leader recounts how turning his life into high art garners for Bellow a string of prestigious awards, including the Nobel Prize, but Leader also exposes in the raw particulars of that life what Bellow himself calls his persistent and wicked habits of soul. Readers may detect such habits in Bellow's callous treatment of wives (five!), children, and friends, and in his heedless willingess to expose to public view intimate details of the relationships he potently fictionalizes. The many readers drawn to Bellow's fiction will thank Leader for this unflinching portrait.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.) -
Library Journal
Starred review from September 15, 2018
Leader (English literature, Roehampton Univ.) scored kudos for To Fame and Fortune, the first volume of his two-volume biography of American Canadian author Saul Bellow (1915-2005). This second volume is just as definitive and revelatory. By 1965, Bellow had published five novels and won the National Book Award for The Adventures of Augie March. Turning 50, he would go on to produce eight more novels, four short story collections, and a play, including his most compelling work, Ravelstein, at 85. Herzog (1964) won him a second National Book Award; he went on to add a third, a Pulitzer Prize, and the Nobel Prize for literature. During the same period, he married wives two through four en route to his fifth, Janis Freedman, who turned out to be a keeper. Leader is the ideal biographer for Bellow, who was a perfectionist in his work but led a complicated personal life, evenhandedly negotiating his way through the contradictory accounts of the writer's amazing journey. VERDICT This is biography at its best and will appeal widely. [See Prepub Alert, 5/22/18.]--David Keymer, Cleveland
Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Library Journal
September 15, 2018
A Pulitzer Prize finalist currently teaching at Roehampton University in Great Britain, Leader has chronicled writers from William Blake to Kingsley Amis. Here he wraps up a two-volume biography of Saul Bellow. The first volume was called "a necessary work for any reader interested in 20th-century literature or literary biography" by LJ's reviewer.
Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly
March 9, 2015
The first volume in this exhaustive project follows Nobel laureate Bellow’s life up to 1964 and the publication of Herzog. (A planned second volume of the biography will cover the last 40 years of Bellow’s life.) Leader (The Life of Kingsley Amis) begins with Bellow’s ancestors in Russia and walks us through his move as a child from Quebec to Chicago. From there, Leader follows Bellow to New York City; Minneapolis; Paris; Princeton, N.J.; Pyramid Lake, Nev.; and Río Piedras, P.R., reading through Bellow’s writing the same sense of itinerancy. Leader describes each year of Bellow’s professional and romantic life in extensive detail, drawing upon collected letters and new interviews. That life proves to be populated by dozens of friends, girlfriends, colleagues, and acquaintances, each of whom is contextualized and described in depth here. Yet exhaustiveness is not a substitute for biographical insight, and Bellow as a living, breathing person remains somewhat elusive among all these stories and cul-de-sacs. That said, Leader has many valuable insights into Bellow, such as how he made use of his life in his novels, sometimes hurting others’ feelings when they discovered versions of themselves in his books. An impressive achievement, this biography gives noble due to one of the 20th century’s most significant writers. -
Kirkus
Starred review from September 1, 2018
Leader (English Literature/Roehampton Univ.) concludes his exemplary life of the famed Canadian-American writer whose literary successes were matched by familial psychodramas, feuds, and other such mishegoss.As the author picks up from The Life of Saul Bellow: To Fame and Fortune, 1915-1964 (2015), the subject of his biography has attained great fame and fortune. Henderson the Rain King (1959) has had five years to make waves, building on earlier books such as The Adventures of Augie March and Dangling Man, and now Herzog (1964) is out, nearly universally hailed and climbing the charts, "supplanting John Le Carr�'s The Spy Who Came in from the Cold" on the bestseller lists. At the time, however, Bellow was not satisfied. Having established himself as a top-flight novelist, he tried his hand at a play that ran for only a month and received some of the toughest reviews of his career, along with a note from Lillian Hellman that Bellow summarized as "I've written a lot of interesting soliloquies, but there's not a play in sight." Undaunted, Bellow returned to prose with a vengeance, putting into practice his pronounced habit of taking every element from real life and conversation and working it into his fictional narratives. Leader ably charts Bellow's continuing evolution as a writer, which will cheer his fans: Bellow matched talent, after all, with an impressive work ethic. Less cheering are his relationships with children, lovers, and spouses, all of which involved considerable drama and, even on his deathbed, shouting and recriminations. His cantankerousness punctuates almost every page, as when he explodes in anger over a companion's going off to see a popular movie while he attended his son's wedding: "By eroding the standards of a wide literate audience," Leader glosses, "M*A*S*H was debasing as well as debased." Always hard at work and always in battle mode, Bellow emerges as a brilliant writer who never minded being disliked--and offered many reasons to do so.Though sometimes overly detailed, this is a top-notch exploration of one of the most important midcentury writers.COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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