Alice Adams Portrait of a writer

Carol Sklenicka, 1948-

Book - 2019

"Alice Adams: Portrait of a Writer has the heartbeat of one American woman's life in the twentieth century. It tells an intimate story of how Alice Adams-white, privileged, talented-endured a lonely childhood as a child in the racially distressed South and came of age during the Great Depression and World War II. Always a rebel in good-girl's clothing, Adams used her education, sexual and emotional curiosity, and uncompromising artistic ambition to break the strictures that bound women in the Fifties. Divorced with a child to raise, she worked at secretarial jobs for two decades before she could earn a living as a writer. Once celebrated as "America's Colette," Adams is now almost forgotten. With the same metic...ulous research and vivid storytelling she brought to Raymond Carver: A Writer's Life, Sklenicka's biography of Alice Adams connects the events of Adams's life to the events depicted in her stories. Sklenicka interviewed scores of Adams's friends and acquaintances and spent months, no years, with her letters and manuscripts. By delving into Adams's personal life, she shows how writing saved Adams from sorrows and how life served her writing. In Ploughshares, Jason Appel praised Sklenicka "one of the most astute literary critics of our time" for her weaving of "perceptive analysis of Carver's stories into her narrative of his life" and for her "even-handed presentation of the leading controversies in Carver scholarship." Though this biography never confuses fact and fiction, it allows them brighten and clarify one another"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Scribner [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Carol Sklenicka, 1948- (author)
Edition
First Scribner hardcover edition
Physical Description
x, 580 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781451621310
  • Prologue
  • Part I. Origins
  • 1. Saved by Her Dolls
  • 2. Agatha and Nic
  • 3. The Family Romance
  • 4. Depressions
  • 5. Girls
  • Part II. Preparation
  • 6. North and South
  • 7. Rumors of War
  • 8. Cocktail of Dreams
  • 9. Impersonators
  • 10. Frustrated Ambitions
  • 11. Family of Three
  • 12. Feeling Free in San Francisco
  • Part III. Independence
  • 13. A Return Trip
  • 14. Freedom
  • 15. Alone
  • 16. Careless Love
  • 17. Robert Kendall McNie
  • 18. The A B D C E Formula
  • 19. Disinherited
  • Part IV. Success
  • 20. Editors and Friends
  • 21. Very Colette
  • 22. Beautiful Girl
  • 23. Rewards
  • 24. A Fateful Age
  • 25. Superior Women
  • 26. Fame and Fortune
  • Part V. Not Middle Age
  • 27. Things Fall Apart
  • 28. Book of Bob
  • 29. Sick
  • 30. The Age Card
  • Epilogue
  • Chronology
  • Acknowledgments
  • Works by Alice Adams
  • Notes
  • Photo Credits
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Sklenicka (Raymond Carver: A Writer's Life, 2009) quotes Alice Adams as saying she ""remembered everything that ever happened to her,"" and as Sklenicka carefully explicates, much of ""everything that ever happened"" ended up in Adams' award-winning fiction. Those who love the novels and short stories, which trace women's lives beginning in 1930s America as they celebrate, grieve, and grow with the century, will be startled and delighted to see where the life and the fiction converge. Indeed, Sklenicka cautions that on occasion, she mines the fiction to fill in factual or emotional gaps in the life, and the biography often reads like an Adams novel blessedly slowed down to allow the reader to soak for a moment in the atmospheres of a Chapel Hill childhood, Radcliffe College, Paris, and 1960s San Francisco. Sklenicka undergirds her examination of Adams with dives into the work of Simone de Beauvoir and psychoanalysis, delineating the ways in which Adams' fiction offers personal narratives of second-wave feminism while also telling the story of this daring and unconventional woman and gifted writer.--Barbara Egel Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Biographer Sklenicka (Raymond Carver: A Writer's Life) succeeds in creating an intriguing portrait of a midcentury fiction writer arguably better known for her acquaintances and times than for her writing. Born into relative privilege in 1926 as the daughter of academics, Adams's parents sent her to boarding school and Radcliffe during the Depression and WWII. Later, the strikingly attractive Adams revolved in Norman Mailer and Saul Bellow's orbit. Yet, while Sklenicka's research indicates that she may have slept with both, hers is not a story of sex to success: those most instrumental in her career were women, such as editor Victoria Wilson, who molded Adams's second novel, 1975's Families and Survivors, into a hit. The times didn't hurt either: after a long apprenticeship, hampered by supporting her husband's own writing career before their 1958 divorce, Adams found an audience in the 1970s that was newly avid for her core concern: female-centric depictions of love and sex. Her career peaked in 1984, when rights to Superior Women sold for $635,000, 15 years before her death from heart problems. A summation of Adams's place in 20th-century literature would have greatly helped, but Sklenicka's well-researched biography nevertheless easily evokes the spirit of Adams's life, times, and works. Agent: Sandra Dijkstra, Sandra Dijkstra Literary. (Dec.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A thorough and often surprising life of the celebrated author of short stories and novels.Sklenicka, whose earlier biography (Raymond Carver: A Writer's Life, 2009) earned high praise, returns with an intimate, detailed life of Adams (1926-1999), who did not begin publishing regularly until the mid-1960s. But when she did, she received recognition quickly. By the time she died of heart failure, she had established herself as a gifted, perceptive, and popular writer, publishing stories often in the New Yorker and books with Knopf. As Sklenicka relates, she enjoyed some hefty paydays. The author focuses mostly on a couple areas of Adams' life: her writing and her active love life. Frequently, Sklenicka points out how deeply Adams drew from her own life to inspire her fiction; she wrote about settings and people that she knew. As Sklenicka reports, frequently, Adams was an attractive woman who displayed a great sense of sexual freedom. One brief marriage was followed by a lengthy cohabitation with another man (it didn't end well), and once she became financially secure, she enjoyed travel, fine food, and a nice house in San Francisco. Sklenicka also charts Adams' acceptance of the women's liberation movement and writes perceptively about her relationship with her gay son. The author doesn't provide much information about Adams' work routines, but there is a deep undercurrent of admiration that sometimes bubbles to the surface. "Alice Adams lived for love and for stories," writes Sklenicka. "Her courage and vulnerability, tenderness and tenacity allowed her to break the strictures of her upbringing and transform her intense emotional sensibility into enduring short stories and novels that illuminate women's lives in the twentieth century." Near the end, Sklenicka herself appears in a startling tale about Adams' ashes.Pervasive, deep research informs this inspiring story of a writer who demonstrably earned such a sturdy, illuminating biography. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.