Invisible writer : a biography of Joyce Carol Oates /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Johnson, Greg, 1953-
Imprint:New York : Dutton, 1998.
Description:xx, 492 p., [16 p. of plates] : ill. ; 24 cm.
Language:English
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Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/3011493
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ISBN:0525941630 (alk. paper)
Review by Choice Review

Oates published her first novel, With Shuddering Fall, in 1964. Since then she has become one of the most prolific major authors in the US, publishing dozens of novels and hundreds of short stories, but also pursuing respectable careers as playwright, screenwriter, poet, critic, and professor (at the University of Detroit, University of Windsor, and Princeton University). A scholar, novelist, and poet himself, Johnson is ably situated to provide the first biography of this protean writer. Johnson's surefooted guide to Oates's fiction centers her best work in her Detroit novel, them (which won the National Book Award), but also pays careful attention to later novels (some nearly as good), which some critics have ignored because the writer has been so productive. Johnson rebuts charges that Oates has been hasty, providing ample evidence of her careful revisions, close working relationships with editors, and long hours of note taking and planning. His narrative suggests that posterity will judge Oates more kindly than her contemporaries do--and will come to value her enormous body of work, with its insightful comments on virtually every US institution. All libraries will be glad to have this book on their shelves. C. Rollyson; Bernard M. Baruch College, CUNY

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

How does Joyce Carol Oates find the time and the energy to produce so much writing? That question is on the mind of many fiction readers when it comes to this amazingly prolific writer. Johnson spent five years researching and writing a biography that definitely gets to the heart of Oates, a project for which he was granted access to his subject's letters and journals. She is a woman of paradox, but Johnson relishes exploring all the paradoxes that her life represents. And, as he admits, he became more interested in why Oates writes so much rather than how; the why extends well beyond simple dedication to complete absorption--but, ironically, never to the point of exclusion of a busy life outside her writing. Johnson's is not a critical study but a full life story; readers learn much about the personal side of Oates, including schooling, family, marriage, teaching and writing careers, and personal and professional relationships. As riveting as it is revealing, this will be the standard biography for a long time. --Brad Hooper

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

Commenting on her output of more than 400 published stories, 30-plus novels and other writings, a hostile critic called Oates an "inexhaustible word machine." Johnson, however, evokes her as something more than a typist with a self-confessed "blindness toward excess." Despite Oates's melodramatic oeuvre and her unmelodramatic career, he reveals a life that is more than her works. He not only describes how Oates's hardscrabble upstate New York, violent Detroit and uppity Princeton are metamorphosed and mythologized in her fiction but also displays the humanizing if occasionally unflattering dimension of the writer labeled by John Updike the foremost "woman of letters" in America. Although admiring, Johnson sees in his subject a propensity to exploit unflatteringly people and situations from her life, and he explores the anorexic emaciation, chronic insomnia and attacks of tachycardia that have afflicted her. The author, an English professor at Kennesaw State College in Georgia, concludes that Princeton has been too comfortable, failing to furnish Oates in her middle years‘she will be 60 in 1998‘with conflict sufficient to power her abilities to their potential, beyond a "Bosch-like American garden of hellish delights." (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

With Oates's cooperation and that of her family, friends, and acquaintances, Johnson (English, Kennesaw State Coll.) provides a comprehensive close-up and personal view of the prolific, controversial 20th-century writer. From Oates's birth in Lockport, New York, to her present life in Princeton, New Jersey, Johnson skillfully interweaves the background, personality, character, lifestyle, and writings of the author. Through this fascinating and well-written biography, readers will feel that they know Oates almost as well as anyone can and may find themselves vacillating between great admiration and empathy for the life of this writer possessed by an insatiable desire for writing, but also possessing an unstoppable, inventive imagination and the incredible energy necessary to feed the desire. Whether or not a fan of Oates's writings, anyone interested in literary biography should read this intriguing account of the extraordinary life of a writer. Highly recommended.‘Jeris Cassel, Rutgers Univ. Libs., New Brunswick, N.J. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An authorized portrait of the intensely prolific novelist as an artist and a person. As Oates's literary executor, fiction writer Johnson (Pagan Babies, 1993; I Am Dangerous, 1996; etc.) wisely uses his access to her presumably massive hoard of papers to develop relatively select themes important in her life. He traces her understanding of violence, for example, to incidents from her family's past; to schoolyard brushes with brutality in her rural New York hometown; to her mid-1960s stint in riot-charged Detroit; and also to several eerie, Rothian, and ominous encounters with fans and students. Her compassion for victims also originated, Johnson says, in her childhood, as did her devotion to ""memorializing"" her parents. But the strongest force animating Oates is doubtless her will to produce, displayed for decades in her famous literary profusion, resulting from a routine protected by a ""bourgeois"" lifestyle and stable marriage to the scholar and critic Raymond Smith. Intertwined with the biographical narrative, Johnson provides a blandly respectful overview of of the writer's artistic growth, charted partly through the record offered in her journal entries. Throughout, Johnson heeds Oates's belief that biographies should be ""solidly grounded in fact""; the result is a full characterization of a multilayered, idiosyncratic woman. In fact, the book is so stocked with documentation that it sometimes goes over the top. For non-diehard Oatesians, this excess will be too much, reflecting the main drawback of nearly all biographies written by allies of the portrayed subject: a loyalty that tends to overstep its bounds. A more basic narrative problem is the relatively quiet life Oates has led, tame at least by the standards of literary lions. This life of talent dutifully plied, sustained, and rewarded offers less drama and excitement than any of the tales Oates has concocted in her fiction. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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