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"A penetrating biography. . . . Ludington offers a psychological
portrait of an intense, contradictory, scornful, but gentle man who
transcended his nineteenth-century roots in Lewiston, Maine, to
view Europe as his home and to make a distinctive contribution to
modernism." Kirkus Reviews"Drawing on Hartley's letters and other
writings as well as on the correspondence and reminiscences of the
artist's friends, Ludington traces the restless career of the
painter. . . . Hartley] had troubled friendships with some of the
most important artists and writers of his day Gertrude Stein,
William Carlos Williams, Fairfield Porter, Eugene O'Neill, Georgia
O'Keeffe, and others. His relationship with Alfred Stieglitz, who
supported him financially and exhibited his work, . . . runs like a
leitmotif through the book, and indicates Hartley's character
demanding, touchy, often ungrateful but also compelling. . . . This
frank and unsentimental account of a life of contradictions and
paradoxes returns one to the artist's paintings with a fresh eye."
Publishers Weekly"Marsden Hartley (1877-1943) had a virtually
unique role as a modernist painter. He was notable not only for his
powerful canvases but for his poetry and essays. Townsend
Ludington's astute portrait of the artist focuses upon his
cosmopolitan sensibility in a generation melding modern art with an
American tradition of mystical idealism. . . . Ludington views
Hartley as an essential American artist embarked on a spiritual
odyssey." Robert Taylor, Boston Globe"
Unique among American novels for its epic scope and panoramic and
social sweep, John Dos Passos' U.S.A. has long been acknowledged as
a monument of modern fiction. In the novels that make up the
trilogy - The 42nd Parallel (1930), 1919 (1932), and The Big Money
(1936) - Dos Passos creates an unforgettable collective portrait of
America, shot through with sardonic comedy and brilliant social
observation. He interweaves the careers of his characters and the
events of their time with a narrative verve and breathtaking
technical skill that make U.S.A. among the most compulsively
readable of modern classics. In his prologue Dos Passos writes:
"U.S.A. is the slice of a continent. U.S.A. is a group of holding
companies, some aggregations of trade unions, a set of laws bound
in calf, a radio network, a chain of moving picture theatres, a
column of stock quotations rubbed out and written in by a Western
Union boy on a blackboard, a public library full of old newspapers
and dogeared history books with protests scrawled on the margins in
pencil...But mostly U.S.A. is the speech of the people". The
trilogy is filled with American speech: labor radicals and
advertising executives, sailors and stenographers, interior
decorators and movie stars. The volume contains newly researched
chronologies of Dos Passos' life and of world events cited in
U.S.A., notes, and an essay on textual selection.
Based on his personal experiences in France during the First World War, Dos Passos’s novel is a fierce denunciation of the military.
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