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Alfred Grossman

Alfred Grossman (1927–1987) was an American writer and novelist.

Alfred Durant Grossman
Born(1927-05-14)14 May 1927
New York City, New York
Died1 January 1987(1987-01-01) (aged 59)
New York City, New York
OccupationWriter
NationalityAmerican

Grossman was born in New York City in 1927.[1] He served in the U.S. Navy from 1945 to 1946, then attended Haverford College, graduating in 1948 with a Bachelor of Arts degree. He went on to attend Harvard, earning a Master of Arts degree in 1949.[2]

Grossman then returned to New York City, where he lived for the rest of his life. From 1951 to 1961, he edited East Europe magazine, the journal of the National Committee for a Free Europe, an anti-communist Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) front organization.[3]

In 1959, he published his first novel, Acrobat Admits (1959). It was an early example of the wave of Black comedy that swept through American fiction in the early 1960s. In the book, a handsome New Yorker seduces two different women, falls for one, and murders a man. "Mine," he told The New York Times reviewer Anthony Boucher, "is that country where the frontier between the possible and the not possible is unmarked." Boucher found the book unsuccessful but "dazzling and delightful."[4] Most reviewers found it slick and amoral, but Marvin Mudrick, in a Hudson Review roundup of a dozen novels, called it "the most perverse and in many ways the most promising of the dozen."[5]

In 1961, after he married Celestia Martinez y Cardeza, who was a successful travel agent, he quit to become a full-time writer. He was, however, frustrated in his attempts to interest an American publisher in his second novel, Many Slippery Errors. It was finally accepted by U. K. publisher Heinemann and published in 1963. Grossman's protagonist, Charles Kraft works as a demographer for the United Nations but quietly attempts to subvert the aims of his conventional world. He takes of up with gang of Brooklyn hoodlums, has an affair with one of its female members, conspires to blow up a city power plant, and allows his wife to find him in bed with his own sister. "...[W]e must live in a tension between the commands of society and the demands of the individual, not acceding wholly to one or the other," he remarks at one point.[6] Reviewing the book in the Manchester Guardian, Andrew Leslie wrote that Grossman was an "expert at picking up the shorthand messages of the metropolitan scene."[7] In The Times Literary Supplement, David Williams called it "a fable designed to illuminate the unease and vacuity of modern life, with its sell-or-bust compulsions."[8]

The book was then picked up by Doubleday and published in the U. S.. "This new humorous temper," wrote Martin Levin in the New York Times, "is cool, existential, telegraphic in style--and funny. It substitutes deadpan comment for the moral judgment and is as different from the comic spirit of a decade ago as bop was from Dixieland." He criticized Grossman for creating characters that were shells, but considered them "beautifully decorated shells, and the author manipulates them in a masterful game of his own invention."[9]

Marie Beginning (1965) was Grossman's third novel. Grossman's heroine, Marie Betty Svobodna, conducts guerrilla warfare against conventions using nothing more than bravado and bare-faced truth as her weapons. "Her career is a parody of the American dream of success," Anthony Ward wrote. Ward called it "a very good novel" and wrote that Grossman was "inventive in a way few contemporary English writers are."[10] In a The Times Literary Supplement review titled "Poor Girl Bests Fascist Beast," Martin Seymour-Smith wrote, "Mr Grossman's extravagance and apparent zaniness are deceptive: although this is a comic novel, it is securely built on carefully planned and serious foundations."[11]

The Do-Gooders (1968) was Grossman's last novel. In it, he brought back the title character from Marie Beginning, now widowed and wealthy and eager to act as an agent of chaos on a larger scale, inciting riots and blowing holes in 12-lane freeways. In a featured The New York Times review, John Leonard wrote, "His locales are always urban, his characters usually trapped, and his style a pastiche of sex, puns, parodies and razor-wounds that gets funnier as the situation gets more desperate." Leonard quoted Anthony Burgess, who called Grossman "one of the most brilliant of the younger American novelists," whose work was "vital, idiosyncratic, crammed with living characters and real dialogue." Leonard wrote with anticipation, "Grossman has the wit, talent, imagination, intelligence and moral vision to terrify and transform. I'm waiting for more."[12]

Instead, Grossman was soon forced to return to full-time work out of financial need. Around the time that The Do-Gooders was published, Grossman was included in a Chicago Tribune feature, "Ten Neglected American Writers Who Deserve to be Better Known." He told the reporter, Lois Cantor, "I've never made more than piddling sums, not counting a $2,000 advance on movie rights to one book, which fell through. So one just turns one's face to the wall."[13] Soon after, Grossman went to work as a staff editor of The New York Times Encyclopedic Almanac. He divorced his first wife and married Althea Van Boskirk, who also worked on the almanac, in 1972.[14]

Grossman never published another book. A 1981 The New York Times article titled, "Life's Ironies Taunt a Manhattan Novelist," revealed that Grossman had been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1976 and was living alone, using a wheelchair, dependent upon Medicaid and Social Security. Although he had lost the ability to type, he was still writing, composing in his head, then taping his mental draft. He said he had finished on a novel taken from a line in the Book of Job, about a New Yorker who communicates with an alien spacecraft, but had been unable to find a publisher for it.[15] When Strand Bookstore employee Burt Britton solicited a self portrait sketch in 1975, Grossman provided an awkward circle with the caption, "E = MC2" and a scrawled signature.[16]

He died in 1987.[1]

Works edit

Novels

  • Acrobat Admits (1959)
  • Many Slippery Errors (1963 U. K./1964 U. S.)
  • Marie Beginning (1965)
  • The Do-Gooders (1968)

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014". Ancestry.com. Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  2. ^ Vinson, James, ed. (1976). Contemporary Novelists (2nd ed.). London: St. James Press. pp. 575–577.
  3. ^ Prados, John (2006). Safe for Democracy: The Secret Wars of the CIA. Ivan R. Dee. p. 47. ISBN 9781615780112.
  4. ^ Boucher, Anthony (22 February 1959). "Land Without Frontiers: Acrobat Admits". The New York Times. pp. BR29.
  5. ^ Mudrick, Marvin (Spring 1959). "Art for Whose Sake?". Hudson Review. 12 (1): 141–147. doi:10.2307/3848428. JSTOR 3848428.
  6. ^ Bryant, Jerry H. (1970). The Open Decision: the Contemporary American Novel and its Intellectual Background. New York: The Free Press. pp. 210–211.
  7. ^ Leslie, Andrew (1 February 1963). "City lights and shadows". The Guardian. p. 7.
  8. ^ Williams, David F. (1 February 1963). "Fable for Today". The Times Literary Supplement. No. 3179. p. 81.
  9. ^ Levin, Martin (26 April 1964). "A Reader's Report". The New York Times. pp. BR38.
  10. ^ Ward, Anthony (19 June 1964). "Double or Quits". The Spectator. 212 (7095): 828.
  11. ^ Seymour-Smith, Martin (18 June 1964). "Poor Girl Bests Fascist Beast". The Times Literary Supplement. No. 3251. p. 525.
  12. ^ Leonard, John (1 July 1968). "Books of The Times: Laughter in the Crypt". The New York Times. p. 31.
  13. ^ Cantor, Lois (2 June 1968). "Ten Neglected American Writers Who Deserve to be Better Known". Chicago Tribune. pp. 251–252.
  14. ^ "New York, New York, Marriage License Indexes, 1907-2018". Ancestry.com. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
  15. ^ Farrell, William E. (28 February 1981). "About New York: Life's Ironies Taunt a Manhattan Novelist". The New York Times. p. 27.
  16. ^ Britton, Burt (1976). Self-portrait: Book People Picture Themselves. New York: Random House. p. 62. ISBN 9780394496481.

alfred, grossman, 1927, 1987, american, writer, novelist, alfred, durant, grossmanborn, 1927, 1927new, york, city, yorkdied1, january, 1987, 1987, aged, york, city, yorkoccupationwriternationalityamerican, grossman, born, york, city, 1927, served, navy, from, . Alfred Grossman 1927 1987 was an American writer and novelist Alfred Durant GrossmanBorn 1927 05 14 14 May 1927New York City New YorkDied1 January 1987 1987 01 01 aged 59 New York City New YorkOccupationWriterNationalityAmerican Grossman was born in New York City in 1927 1 He served in the U S Navy from 1945 to 1946 then attended Haverford College graduating in 1948 with a Bachelor of Arts degree He went on to attend Harvard earning a Master of Arts degree in 1949 2 Grossman then returned to New York City where he lived for the rest of his life From 1951 to 1961 he edited East Europe magazine the journal of the National Committee for a Free Europe an anti communist Central Intelligence Agency CIA front organization 3 In 1959 he published his first novel Acrobat Admits 1959 It was an early example of the wave of Black comedy that swept through American fiction in the early 1960s In the book a handsome New Yorker seduces two different women falls for one and murders a man Mine he told The New York Times reviewer Anthony Boucher is that country where the frontier between the possible and the not possible is unmarked Boucher found the book unsuccessful but dazzling and delightful 4 Most reviewers found it slick and amoral but Marvin Mudrick in a Hudson Review roundup of a dozen novels called it the most perverse and in many ways the most promising of the dozen 5 In 1961 after he married Celestia Martinez y Cardeza who was a successful travel agent he quit to become a full time writer He was however frustrated in his attempts to interest an American publisher in his second novel Many Slippery Errors It was finally accepted by U K publisher Heinemann and published in 1963 Grossman s protagonist Charles Kraft works as a demographer for the United Nations but quietly attempts to subvert the aims of his conventional world He takes of up with gang of Brooklyn hoodlums has an affair with one of its female members conspires to blow up a city power plant and allows his wife to find him in bed with his own sister W e must live in a tension between the commands of society and the demands of the individual not acceding wholly to one or the other he remarks at one point 6 Reviewing the book in the Manchester Guardian Andrew Leslie wrote that Grossman was an expert at picking up the shorthand messages of the metropolitan scene 7 In The Times Literary Supplement David Williams called it a fable designed to illuminate the unease and vacuity of modern life with its sell or bust compulsions 8 The book was then picked up by Doubleday and published in the U S This new humorous temper wrote Martin Levin in the New York Times is cool existential telegraphic in style and funny It substitutes deadpan comment for the moral judgment and is as different from the comic spirit of a decade ago as bop was from Dixieland He criticized Grossman for creating characters that were shells but considered them beautifully decorated shells and the author manipulates them in a masterful game of his own invention 9 Marie Beginning 1965 was Grossman s third novel Grossman s heroine Marie Betty Svobodna conducts guerrilla warfare against conventions using nothing more than bravado and bare faced truth as her weapons Her career is a parody of the American dream of success Anthony Ward wrote Ward called it a very good novel and wrote that Grossman was inventive in a way few contemporary English writers are 10 In a The Times Literary Supplement review titled Poor Girl Bests Fascist Beast Martin Seymour Smith wrote Mr Grossman s extravagance and apparent zaniness are deceptive although this is a comic novel it is securely built on carefully planned and serious foundations 11 The Do Gooders 1968 was Grossman s last novel In it he brought back the title character from Marie Beginning now widowed and wealthy and eager to act as an agent of chaos on a larger scale inciting riots and blowing holes in 12 lane freeways In a featured The New York Times review John Leonard wrote His locales are always urban his characters usually trapped and his style a pastiche of sex puns parodies and razor wounds that gets funnier as the situation gets more desperate Leonard quoted Anthony Burgess who called Grossman one of the most brilliant of the younger American novelists whose work was vital idiosyncratic crammed with living characters and real dialogue Leonard wrote with anticipation Grossman has the wit talent imagination intelligence and moral vision to terrify and transform I m waiting for more 12 Instead Grossman was soon forced to return to full time work out of financial need Around the time that The Do Gooders was published Grossman was included in a Chicago Tribune feature Ten Neglected American Writers Who Deserve to be Better Known He told the reporter Lois Cantor I ve never made more than piddling sums not counting a 2 000 advance on movie rights to one book which fell through So one just turns one s face to the wall 13 Soon after Grossman went to work as a staff editor of The New York Times Encyclopedic Almanac He divorced his first wife and married Althea Van Boskirk who also worked on the almanac in 1972 14 Grossman never published another book A 1981 The New York Times article titled Life s Ironies Taunt a Manhattan Novelist revealed that Grossman had been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1976 and was living alone using a wheelchair dependent upon Medicaid and Social Security Although he had lost the ability to type he was still writing composing in his head then taping his mental draft He said he had finished on a novel taken from a line in the Book of Job about a New Yorker who communicates with an alien spacecraft but had been unable to find a publisher for it 15 When Strand Bookstore employee Burt Britton solicited a self portrait sketch in 1975 Grossman provided an awkward circle with the caption E MC2 and a scrawled signature 16 He died in 1987 1 Works editNovels Acrobat Admits 1959 Many Slippery Errors 1963 U K 1964 U S Marie Beginning 1965 The Do Gooders 1968 References edit a b Social Security Death Index 1935 2014 Ancestry com Retrieved 25 September 2019 Vinson James ed 1976 Contemporary Novelists 2nd ed London St James Press pp 575 577 Prados John 2006 Safe for Democracy The Secret Wars of the CIA Ivan R Dee p 47 ISBN 9781615780112 Boucher Anthony 22 February 1959 Land Without Frontiers Acrobat Admits The New York Times pp BR29 Mudrick Marvin Spring 1959 Art for Whose Sake Hudson Review 12 1 141 147 doi 10 2307 3848428 JSTOR 3848428 Bryant Jerry H 1970 The Open Decision the Contemporary American Novel and its Intellectual Background New York The Free Press pp 210 211 Leslie Andrew 1 February 1963 City lights and shadows The Guardian p 7 Williams David F 1 February 1963 Fable for Today The Times Literary Supplement No 3179 p 81 Levin Martin 26 April 1964 A Reader s Report The New York Times pp BR38 Ward Anthony 19 June 1964 Double or Quits The Spectator 212 7095 828 Seymour Smith Martin 18 June 1964 Poor Girl Bests Fascist Beast The Times Literary Supplement No 3251 p 525 Leonard John 1 July 1968 Books of The Times Laughter in the Crypt The New York Times p 31 Cantor Lois 2 June 1968 Ten Neglected American Writers Who Deserve to be Better Known Chicago Tribune pp 251 252 New York New York Marriage License Indexes 1907 2018 Ancestry com Retrieved 26 September 2019 Farrell William E 28 February 1981 About New York Life s Ironies Taunt a Manhattan Novelist The New York Times p 27 Britton Burt 1976 Self portrait Book People Picture Themselves New York Random House p 62 ISBN 9780394496481 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfred Grossman amp oldid 1166727113, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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