This collection of essays by a diverse group of young academics,
established critics, and well-known writers strikes an intriguing
balance between scholarship and reminiscence. The only full-length
book on Mary McCarthy that is not a biography, this volume contains
discussions of McCarthy as a member of the New York intelligentsia,
her search for a just and ethical political philosophy, and the
paradox of her views on feminism. The contributors include McCarthy
biographers Carol Brightman, Carol Gelderman, and Fran Kiernan;
novelists Thomas Flanagan, Maureen Howard, and Thomas Mallon;
Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Frances Fitzgerald; and critics
Morris Dickstein and Katie Roiphe. The book concludes with a moving
reminiscence by Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.
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