20 Great Biographies of
Famous Authors
By Tyler
Coates
There’s
always something exciting about reading a literary figure’s memoir, learning
the details of their personal life (those they’re willing to share, anyway) and
getting a glimpse into their creative process. But it’s perhaps more
illuminating to read an outsider’s account of a literary great, assembled from
years of reporting and sifting through private papers. A literary biography
might not be as sensational as, say, the life story of a doomed Hollywood
starlet (although certainly a fair number of novelists, playwrights, and poets
have lived turbulent lives), but they do offer a complete picture that shatters
the fourth walls of our favorite writers’ work. Here’s a collection of great
bios that accomplish just that.
Anne Sexton: A Biography, Diane
Wood Middlebrook
Middlebrook’s biography of the Pulitzer
Prize-winning poet Anne Sexton was controversial — it exposed several of
Sexton’s secrets, culled from tapes of her psychiatric sessions — but it paints
a complete portrait of a fractured personality.
Arthur Miller: His Life and
Work, Martin Gottfried
The accomplished playwright and notorious
public figure Arthur Miller’s life gets the unfiltered treatment from
biographer Martin Gottfried.
Beautiful Shadow: A Life of
Patricia Highsmith, Andrew Wilson
The woman responsible for thrillers like Strangers
on a Train and The Talented Mr. Ripley had her own share of secrets,
and Wilson’s biography provides an inside look at Highsmith’s journals and
letters that reveals a startling dark genius behind some of the most shocking
literature of the 20th century.
The Bradbury Chronicles:
The Life of Ray Bradbury, Sam Weller
Perhaps the most important sci-fi writer of
the last century, Bradbury gave journalist Sam Weller unprecedented access to
his private papers — as well as hours of interviews — for this biography, which
reveals his writing process and gives a detailed look inside his imagination.
The Brontë Myth, Lucasta
Miller
Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Brontë were
the subjects of various rumors and gossip once they reached great acclaim for
writing some of the most popular novels of the 19th century. Here, Lucasta
Miller breaks apart the myths surrounding these enigmatic young women.
Cheever: A Life, Blake
Bailey
Bailey’s portrait of John Cheever is a bleak
one, full of suburban frustration, alcoholism, and frustrating sexual
yearnings.
Every Love Story Is a Ghost
Story: A Life of David Foster Wallace, D. T. Max
Just four years after Foster Wallace’s
suicide in 2008, D. T. Max’s biography chronicled the lows and the highs in the
author’s life, from his struggles with depression and alcoholism to the
demanding process of writing the epic Infinite Jest.
Harriet Jacobs: A Life, Jean
Fagan Yellin
In 1987, while a professor at Pace
University, Jean Fagan Yellin discovered the identity of the pseudonymous
writer Linda Brent, under whose name Incidents in the Life of a Slave
Girl was originally published in 1861. Her biography of Harriet Jacobs
follows her life as a slave, then a writer, and finally as an activist.
The Life of Graham Greene, Norman
Sherry
Sherry’s three-volume biography is an
exhaustive look at one of the greatest British novelists of the 20th century.
Lyrics of Sunshine and
Shadow: The Tragic Courtship and Marriage of Paul Laurence Dunbar and Alice
Ruth Moore: A History of Love and Violence Among the African American Elite, Eleanor
Alexander
Paul Laurence Dunbar and Alice Ruth Moore
were considered the African-American equivalents of the Brownings, but their
relationship was far from perfect. In private, Dunbar was an alcoholic who
abused his wife both physically and sexually, culminating in their divorce in
1902.
One Matchless Time: A Life
of William Faulkner, Jay Parini
Parini’s book about the great Southern writer
delves into his personal history as well as his fictional works, giving context
to Faulkner’s characters in his alternate world of Yoknapatawpha County.
P.G. Wodehouse: A Biography, Frances
Donaldson
Not only did Sir Pelham Greville Wodehouse
create two of the most beloved characters in English literature, he chronicles
their adventures in nearly 100 books. Donaldson’s biography of Wodehouse is a
touching portrait of the author through the ups and downs of his life and
career.
Saint Genet: Actor and
Martyr, Jean-Paul Satre
The French philosopher follows Jean Genet
from vagabond and petty thief to brilliant writer in this 1952 biography.
Savage Beauty: The Life of
Edna St. Vincent Millay, Nancy Milford
The first woman to win a Pulitzer Prize, Edna
St. Vincent Millay lived a turbulent life, far beyond turning out some of the
Jazz Age’s most important poetry. Milford’s biography of the poet is filled
with promiscuity, addiction, and familial loyalty.
Shakespeare: The Biography, Peter
Ackroyd
With a novelist’s skill, Ackroyd creates a
stunning narrative that follows the Bard from Statford to London, and depicts him
as three figures: actor, playwright, and businessman.
The Silent Woman: Sylvia
Plath and Ted Hughes, Janet Malcolm
Hardly your typical literary biography,
Malcolm’s book is a postmodern look at the biography as a genre, particularly
the Sylvia Plath Biography Industry that still glamorizes and misinterprets the
poet’s work and suicide.
Tête-à-Tête: Simone de
Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre, Hazel Rowley
An exciting telling of the
usual relationship between two important and prolific philosophers.
Virginia Woolf: An Inner
Life, Julia Briggs
Woolf was hardly an autobiographical writer,
but her biographer Briggs set out to read her oeuvre through the lens of her
personal history.
Wendy and the Lost Boys:
The Uncommon Life of Wendy Wasserstein, Julie Salamon
Wendy Wasserstein was both a Pulitzer
Prize-winning playwright (and the first woman to win a Tony for playwriting)
and a New York institution. Salamon’s biography paints a compelling portrait of
Wasserstein — both the public and private figures.
Zelda: A Biography, Nancy
Milford
An acclaimed bestseller, Milford’s account of
Zelda Fitzgerald’s troubled life and relationship with her novelist husband
provides a full portrait of a figure often reduced to sketches.
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