Home
Results for: Nathanael West
Britannica Conci...(1 of 7 sources) Open/Close data Source
Nathanael West
(born Oct. 17, 1903, New York, N.Y., U.S. — died Dec. 22, 1940, near El Centro, Calif.) U.S. writer. He attended Brown University and was supporting himself as a hotel manager, giving free or low-rent rooms to struggling fellow writers, when he wrote the novella Miss Lonelyhearts (1933), about an advice columnist whose attempts to solace his correspondents end in ironic defeat. A Cool Million (1934) mocks the American dream as popularized by Horatio Alger. His last novel, The Day of the Locust (1939), depicts the savagery lurking beneath the Hollywood dream. Though not widely read until after his death in an auto accident at age 37, West is now considered a major American novelist.

For more information on Nathanael West, visit Britannica.com.



Biographies Open/Close data Source
Columbia Ency. Open/Close data Source
Works Open/Close data Source
Quotes By Open/Close data Source
Wikipedia Open/Close data Source
Mentioned In Open/Close data Source