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Conversations with Mary McCarthy

Conversations with Mary McCarthy

Edited by Carol Gelderman
Series: Literary Conversations Series

Paperback : 9781617030147, 273 pages, March 2011

Collected interviews with the well-known and forthright author of twenty-four books and countless reviews and essays

Description

For over half a century Mary McCarthy (1912–1989) was at the center of intellectual life in America. Both through her writing—she published twenty-four books and countless reviews and essays—and through her personal involvement—from protesting Stalinism in the thirties and forties to opposing the war in Vietnam in the sixties and seventies—she helped to shape American thought and culture. She became a respected critic and was a founding editor of Partisan Review.

Fresh out of college, she set the literary world astir with a series of articles attacking the mediocrity of America's book reviewers. She very naturally gravitated to the center of controversy and remained caustic and forthright to the end of her life.

The interviews collected in this book reveal a fascinating life and the brilliant mind of a born conversationalist. With a riveting, liberal intellect that could attach itself to any worthy topic, Mary McCarthy was a great and entertaining talker, able to dissect politics, literature, or nincompoops. These interviews reveal Mary McCarthy's grand-scale mind and give facts about her biography. She was always interested in finding out the truth. “I believe there is a truth,” she said, “and that it's knowable.”