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Although this book would be fantastic with only its compelling story line and breathtaking adventure, it is enriched by a profound and universal philosophy that questions and defines such concepts as love, friendship, racism, and religion. Captain from Castile is an inspiring and enthralling novel that I would equally recommend as an adventure, a romance, a historical and cultural depiction, or a deeper, almost philosophical piece. I found it a book that was hard to put down, yet so absorbing that when I reached the final page, I wished that the book was longer so that I might remain in the story a few moments longer.
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The movie that was made in the 1950s (Tyrone Power as Orsini, Orson Welles as Borgia and Wanda Hendrix as Camilla) does not do the book justice, for all that there are some nice scenes actually filmed on location in Italy. Oh, and Tyrone Power does look great in tights. Check him out in the wedding scene at the end.
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and, perhaps most importantly, as Jonathan Yardley says of himself, "I am a son of the Mid-Atlantic". But I suspect most readers will enjoy
the ride as Mr. Yardley takes us along on his journey, which wends from Yardley, PA where he searches for signs of some lingering family
connection, throughout the region that also includes Delaware, Washington, DC, New Jersey, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, and
Maryland, where the book ends with his plaintive meditations on the soon to be departed Memorial Stadium, longtime home of his beloved
Baltimore Orioles.
It is the unfortunate nature of this disparate agglomeration of states that even at the end of the book they still seem totally random, rather than
resembling anything like a cohesive section of the country. But even if they don't cohere, they each seem interesting in their own way as
presented here.
GRADE : B+
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This volume covers the time from Mencken's apprenticeship to when he and George Nathan founded and edited the influential American Mercury magazine. During the last eight years of his life, Mencken wrote this memoir "as a personal curriculum vitae" and as a part of American literary history "for the use of resurrection men in the years to come."
Because of the stroke he suffered, the notes went unfinished. His will stipulated to a library in his native Baltimore that they remain sealed until 1980 or 35 years after his death. In 1991 the seals were broken and this book was published soon after.
Mencken and Nathan published and, in some cases, introduced to the world an impressive list of writers, including Dreiser, Cather, Pound, Fitzgerald, O'Neill, Anderson, Lewis, and Masters. These were some of the major writers of the period and are proof of Mencken's ability to discover and promote literary talent. The occasionally trying encounters with Dreiser, Fitzgerald, and Lewis prove that the curmudgeon of American letters also had a certain amount of patience and compassion for those whose work he believed in.
It's a pity, certainly, but editor Jonathan Yardley has done a splendid job editing the manuscript down to this book. Yardley succeeded in accomplishing his goal, to "let Mencken be Mencken" and to keep himself in the background. One approvingly contrasts this style of editing with David Cairns well-researched but fussily-footnoted _Memoirs of Hector Berlioz_.
So, we have Mencken's own account of the beginnings of his career, and his encounters with publishers, editors, poets, writers, and other notables of the 1910s. The only person who gets treated as an equal is his partner at _The Smart Set_ magazine, George Jean Nathan. Most everyone else has their weaknesses and strengths--if they have any strengths in his eyes--baldly and succinctly described. We meet the then up-and-coming Theodore Dreiser, Edgar Lee Masters, and Ezra Pound, to mention a few. Mencken gives us some flash-forwards every now and then--we see Pound as a raving brownshirt in the Thirties, demanding to be published in Mencken's magazine. Mencken prints the text of the withering reply he sent back.
Mencken's tone can be off-putting for a neutral reader. He frequently comes across as suaver-than-thou, unconned and unconnable. But most likely only people who already love Mencken will read this anyway, so they will enjoy themselves nonetheless. And he is very funny in some vignettes. Read the one where he and Nathan pretend to be interested in a tramp poet's tour of Greenwich Village.
There are two paragraphs early on in the book which may serve as the thesis statement for his whole life and career. In them, he describes how he was never attracted to religion or its secular imitations, nor ever considered himself a tool of the plutocracy. And indeed, a review of his output does show that he fell into his distinctively cynical style very early in his career, and never seemed to find cause to depart from it. In this biography he relates his activities and his reasons for them with very few emotional asides. Like a speakeasy gin-and-tonic, this is astringent stuff--but it hits the spot.
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When I read a biography I expect to learn about the details of the individual's life, not baseball stories during the teens.
Mr. Yardley does cover some very limited events of Ring Lardner's life between his baseball history lessons. If I want to read a book on Baseball history, I would find a book on that subject. While some may find the stories entertaining, I found them boring and over done.
If you are looking for a Biography of Ring Lardner's life do not buy this book. If you want a early history of Baseball you will be right at home. I rate this book in reality 5 yawns, the only way I could stay awake reading it was on a cross trainer at the gym and even then it was an effort.
Jonathan Yardley sets the stage with a 38 page section about baseball as Lardner knew it. If you're allergic to baseball you can skip this part. The other 362 pages of text mention baseball no more than is necessary to tell Ring's story. Mostly this is an affectionate, critically insightful, well written biography of a vastly influential and still funny American writer who is sadly neglected today. Includes a decent sampling of Ring's newspaper journalism and personal letters.
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I don't think that a better way could be found to whet the reader's appetite for the tasty tidbits found in this book than to discuss and quote from a few select columns.
April 18, 1983: "Books That Comfort"
Yardley takes as his starting point a letter to the editor from a reader who complained that GRAPES OF WRATH was required reading in her daughter's Northern Virginia High School. Her argument was that her daughter's love of reading was being destroyed by being forced to read such a dreary, depressing book as GRAPES OF WRATH and that it would be more appropriate to choose only books that uplift the spirit and gladden life. After a discussion in which he mentions a number of valid reasons for reading GRAPES OF WRATH including its social impact, Yardley comments that the letter writewr's criteria for selecting books would eliminate almost all of the world's great literature. For examples he mentions Shakespeare's Tragedies, most of Dickens' novels, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, The Greek Classics and on and on ad infinitum and would limit a student's exposure to reading to POLLYANNA, REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM, and PARSON WEEM'S LIFE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON,
He concludes with, "A child raised on nothing except good news and 'comforting ideas' will become an adult almost certainly incapable of meeting life on its own tough terms."
July 4, 1988: "The Age of Psychology"
In this column, Yardley takes on both the "expert witness" brand of hired courtroom psychologists and the media psychologists who dispense advice on a moments notice. Calling much of this type of instant analysis "psychobabble," he goes on to state that, "Were there no psychobabble and no psychologists to spout it, Phil Donahue and Oprah Winfrey would go out of business overnight." He also comments that television newscasts would probably have to shut down if they were deprived of their five-second spots of instant in-depth analysis that "tells it like it is."
The real pity of this is, he states, that in our exposure to psychobabble we lose sight of the good that a competent psychoanalyst can do, in an appropriate environment, for troubled individuals and families.
These are but two of the sixty plus subjects that Yardley addresses. Each one is interesting, intelligent, and highly readable Yardley frequently risks being "out of step," not out of contrariness, but out of belief. all in all, this book belongs on every reader's must list.