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Saul Bellow

 
Who2 Biography: Saul Bellow, Writer
 

  • Born: 10 June 1915
  • Birthplace: Lachine, Quebec, Canada
  • Died: 5 April 2005
  • Best Known As: Author of Henderson, The Rain King and Seize the Day

Name at birth: Solomon Bellows

Saul Bellow was a Jewish-American writer who in 1976 won the Nobel Prize for a career that included the novels Herzog (1965) and Seize the Day (1956). The son of Russian immigrants, he spent most of his life in Chicago and was closely associated with the city. His first novel, The Dangling Man, was written while Bellow was a Merchant Marine during World War II and published in 1944. A Guggenheim Fellowship in 1948 allowed him to travel in Europe and work on The Adventures of Augie March (1953), a National Book Award winner in 1954. His 1959 novel, Henderson, The Rain King, was a commercial and critical success, and Bellows was hailed as one of America's finest writers. Herzog (1964) and Mr. Sammler's Planet (1970) both won National Book Awards, and Humboldt's Gift (1975) earned Bellows a Pulitzer Prize. Bellows wrote about modern man -- an urban American Jew in most cases -- and the attempt to find identity and spiritual comfort in a neurotic and alienating society. He also wrote essays, short stories and plays, and taught for many years at the University of Chicago, and, after 1993, Boston University. His other books include More Die of Heartbreak (1987), A Theft (1989) and To Jerusalem and Back: A Personal Account (1976), his non-fiction account of his 1975 sojourn to Israel.

Bellow was married five times, the last time to Janis Freedman, a former student who was more than 40 years younger; in 1999 they had a daughter, when Bellow was 84 years old.

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Biography: Saul Bellow
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An American author of fiction, essays, and drama, Saul Bellow (born 1915) reached the first rank of contemporary fiction with his picaresque novel "The Adventures of Augie March".

Saul Bellow, born of Russian immigrant parents in Lachine, Quebec, on June 10, 1915, grew up in Montreal, where he learned Hebrew, Yiddish, and French as well as English. When he was nine his family moved to Chicago, and to this city Bellow remained deeply devoted. After two years at the University of Chicago, Bellow transferred to Northwestern University and obtained a bachelor of science degree in 1937. Four months after enrolling as a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin, he fled formal education forever.

During the next decade Bellow held a variety of jobs - with the WPA Writers Project, the editorial department of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, the Pestalozzi-Froebel Teachers College, and the Merchant Marine. More importantly, he published two novels, both with autobiographical overtones. Dangling Man (1944), in the form of a journal, concerns a young Chicagoan waiting to be drafted into military service. The Victim (1947), a more ambitious work, describes the frustrations of a New Yorker seeking to discover and preserve his own identity against the background of domestic and religious (Gentile versus Jewish) conflicts. Neither novel was heralded as exceptional by contemporary critics.

After World War II Bellow joined the University of Minnesota English Department, spent a year in Paris and Rome as a Guggenheim fellow, and taught briefly at New York University, Princeton University, and Bard College. Above all, however, he concentrated on writing fiction. With the publication of The Adventures of Augie March (1953), Bellow won his first National Book Award. A lengthy, free-form liberating story of a young Chicago Jew growing up absurd, Augie March combines comic zest and a narrative virtuosity rare in any decade. Bellow followed it in 1956 with Seize the Day, which is a collection of three short stories, a one-act play, and the novella that gives the title to the volume - a tautly written description of one day in the life of a middle-aged New Yorker facing a major domestic crisis. Some critics feel that Bellow never surpassed this novella.

Devotees of Henderson the Rain King (1959) enjoyed Bellow's return to a more free-flowing manner in describing an American millionaire's search to understand the human condition in his flight from a tangled marital arrangement and his adventures in Africa. His next novel, Herzog (1964), won him a second National Book Award and an international reputation. Doubtlessly based on personal sources, it portrays Moses Herzog, a middle-aged university professor, and his battles with his faithless wife Madeline, his friend Valentine Gersbach, and his own alienated self. Through a series of unposted letters, many of them highly comic, Herzog finally resolves his struggles, not in marital reconciliation but in rational acceptance and self-control.

In 1962 Bellow became a professor at the University of Chicago, a post which allowed him to continue writing fiction and plays. The Last Analysis had a brief run on Broadway in 1964. Six short stories, collected in Mosby's Memoirs and Other Stories (1968), and his sixth novel, Mr. Sammler's Planet (1969), elevated Bellow's reputation to the point where one critic wrote that if Bellow was not the most important American novelist, then whoever was had better announce himself quickly. Some critics called him the successor of Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner.

Humboldt's Gift (1975) added the Pulitzer Prize and the Nobel Prize for Literature to Bellow's list of awards and led Frank McConnell to observe that his books "form a consistent, carefully nurtured oeuvre not often encountered in the works of American writers." In her glowing review of his short story collection, Him with His Foot in His Mouth and Other Stories (1984), Cynthia Ozick declared: "these five ravishing stories honor and augment his genius."

Bellow's later novels have not received the same unequivocal praise. The Dean's December (1982) and More Die of Heartbreak (1987) retained his distinctive style but some believed the cynicism of the characters signaled a lessening of Bellow's own trademark humanism.

Since 1987, Bellow has released a number of novellas: A Theft (1989), The Bellarosa Connection (1989), Something to Remember Me By (1991), and The Actual (1997). These works have met with similarly mixed reviews.

Despite the recent coolness towards his work, Bellow's place in American literature seems secure, most notably for his ability to combine social commentary with sharply drawn characters. His best fiction has been compared to the Russian masters, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky.

Robert Penn Warren's review of Augie March in The New Republic in 1953 seems to sum up subsequent reaction to his work: "It is, in a way, a tribute, though a backhanded one, to point out the faults of Saul Bellow's novel, for the faults merely make the virtues more impressive."

Further Reading

Full-length studies of Saul Bellow include Keith Michael Opdahl, The Novels of Saul Bellow: An Introduction (1967); John Jacob Clayton, Saul Bellow: In Defense of Man (1968); and Irving Malin, Saul Bellow's Fiction (1969). Useful introductory essays are Tony Tanner, Saul Bellow (1965); Earl Rovit, Saul Bellow (1967); and Robert Detweiler, Saul Bellow: A Critical Essay (1967). Irving Malin edited a collection of 12 essays, Saul Bellow and the Critics (1967). Another essay collection, edited by Harold Bloom, is Saul Bellow (1986).

 

(born June 10, 1915, Lachine, near Montreal, Que., Can. — died April 5, 2005, Brookline, Mass., U.S.) Canadian-born U.S. novelist. Born to an immigrant Russian Jewish family, he was fluent in Yiddish from childhood. His family moved to Chicago when he was nine; he grew up and attended college there and, after some years in New York, returned to teach in Chicago. His works, which make him representative of the Jewish American writers whose works became central to American literature after World War II, deal with the modern urban dweller, disaffected by society but not destroyed in spirit; his originality lay partly in his combination of cultural sophistication and street wisdom. His works include The Adventures of Augie March (1953, National Book Award), Seize the Day (1956), Henderson the Rain King (1959), Herzog (1964, National Book Award), Mr. Sammler's Planet (1970, National Book Award), Humboldt's Gift (1975, Pulitzer Prize), The Dean's December (1982), and Ravelstein (2000). He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1976.

For more information on Saul Bellow, visit Britannica.com.

 
US History Companion: Bellow, Saul
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(1915-2005), novelist. In 1984, when Bellow returned to his hometown of Lachine, Quebec, and spoke at a ceremony in his honor, the mayor described him as "le plus grand écrivain de notre epoque"--a claim that few would dispute. The only American writer ever to win three National Book Awards, the Pulitzer Prize, and the Nobel Prize (1976), Bellow stands in a line of succession to William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway, both Nobel laureates and, in their own idiosyncratic ways, representatives of the American realist tradition. What distinguishes Bellow from these predecessors is the international character of his fiction: he is the first American to incorporate the great nineteenth-century European realists in his work. An heir of Isaac Babel and Isaac Bashevis Singer as well as of his fellow Chicagoan Theodore Dreiser, Bellow is unique--a Jewish-American writer who has transcended both identities and become a figure in world literature.

Born in Lachine to Russian immigrants, Bellow was nine when his family moved to Chicago. After graduating from Northwestern University in 1937, he studied for a semester at the University of Wisconsin before returning to Chicago. There he found employment with the New Deal Federal Writers' Project, compiling biographies of midwestern novelists and poets. In the early forties he taught at Pestalozzi-Froebel Teachers College in Chicago and in 1943 went to work for Mortimer Adler, indexing ideas for Adler's Syntopicon.

Bellow's first novel was Dangling Man (1944), a slender book written in the form of a journal about a disenchanted young man in Chicago awaiting induction into the army. It was followed by The Victim (1947), a grim novel that chronicled the tribulations of a Jewish office worker in New York who finds himself shadowed and hounded by a bullying anti-Semite. These books were stiff, well wrought, earnest--Bellow later referred to them as his M.A. and his Ph.D.--and they established his reputation in the New York literary world. But they gave little indication of the profuse, exuberant novels that were to follow.

In Europe on a Guggenheim in the late forties, Bellow stumbled upon the voice that would sustain The Adventures of Augie March. "All I had to do was to be there with buckets to catch it," he recalled. Published in 1953, the novel won Bellow his first National Book Award.

Three years later came Seize the Day, Bellow's terse masterpiece about the fragile fortunes of Tommy Wilhelm, a loser adrift on New York's Upper West Side; and in 1959, Henderson the Rain King, a manic, picaresque novel that tracks the gigantesque Eugene Henderson through an Africa that Bellow had never seen. But it was with Herzog (1964) that he obtained the position of preeminence he has occupied ever since. However entertaining as a chronicle of its hero's marital vicissitudes, the book is primarily a novel of ideas. Herzog is at work on a volume of essays about romanticism, and the novel is energized by his tireless and high-flown theorizing. In his subsequent novels--Mr. Sammler's Planet (1969), Humboldt's Gift (1975), and The Dean's December (1982)--Bellow became increasingly ruminative; his cerebral protagonists, suffused with what Sammler calls "earth-departure objectivity," are less obsessed with their private dramas than with the human condition. "The job, once and for all," declares Charles Citrine in Humboldt's Gift, "was to burst from the fatal self-sufficiency of consciousness and put my remaining strength over into the Imaginative Soul."

Bellow's extraordinary range--his book of reportage about Israel, To Jerusalem and Back (1976), and his numerous uncollected lectures and essays--demonstrates a knowledge of history and an erudition unrivaled in American literature. He possesses, in the words of Irving Howe, "the most powerful mind among contemporary American novelists" and the most powerful imagination.

Bibliography:

Mark Harris, Saul Bellow: Drumlin Woodchuck (1981).

Author:

James Atlas

See also Literature.


 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Saul Bellow
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Bellow, Saul, 1915–2005, American novelist, b. Lachine, Que., as Solomon Bellow, grad. Northwestern Univ., 1937. Born of Russian-Jewish parents, he grew up in the slums of Montreal and Chicago. His fiction features uniquely telling characterizations and is frequently darkly comic. His novels typically deal with large philosophical issues: the search for meaning, the conflicts between moral anomie and the quest for a personal ethic, and the tensions between the imaginative individual and a sometimes indifferent, sometimes entangling world. One of the most distinguished novelists of the mid-20th cent., he won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1976. His novels include Dangling Man (1944), The Adventures of Augie March (1953; National Book Award), Seize the Day (1956), Henderson the Rain King (1959), Herzog (1964; National Book Award), Mr. Sammler's Planet (1970; National Book Award), Humboldt's Gift (1975; Pulitzer Prize), The Dean's December (1982), and Ravelstein (2000). He also published four books of stories, Mosby's Memoirs (1968), Him with His Foot in His Mouth (1984), Something to Remember Me By (1991), and Collected Stories (2001); a novella, The Actual (1997); a memoir, To Jerusalem and Back (1976); a play, The Last Analysis (1964); and an essay collection, It All Adds Up (1994). Bellow taught at a number of universities, including Northwestern Univ., the Univ. of Chicago, and Boston Univ.

Bibliography

See G. L. Cronin and B. Siegel, ed., Conversations with Saul Bellow (1994); biography by J. Atlas (2000); studies by I. Malin (1969), M. Harris (1980), D. Fuchs (1984), P. Hyland (1992), G. Bach, ed. (1995), G. Bach and G. L. Cronin, ed. (2000), and M. A. Quayum (2004); bibliography by G. L. Cronin and B. H. Hall (2d ed. 1987).

 
Works: Works by Saul Bellow
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(b. 1915)

1944Dangling Man. Bellow's first novel uses the netherworld between civilian and military life to explore modern alienation and existential freedom. It focuses on a young man who quits his job and waits to be drafted. With overtones of Kafka and Dostoyevsky, the novel turns the wartime home front into an occasion for serious moral and philosophical meditation.
1947The Victim. Bellow's second novel combines existential themes with anti-Semitism in a story of a Jew who inadvertently causes a Gentile to lose his job, prompting recriminations, persecution, and a painful reassessment of how a good man should live.
1953The Adventures of Augie March. This picaresque novel about a young Chicago Jew allows Bellow to express his views on American immigrant life while at the same time inventing an expansive, multivocal narrative style that is new to American fiction in the 1950s.
1956Seize the Day. The volume combines the title novella with three short stories and a one-act play. The title work, about Tommy Wilhelm's existential crisis, is a brilliantly crafted synthesis of Bellow's dominant themes. Many consider it his masterpiece.
1959Henderson the Rain King. Bellow's novel about a Connecticut millionaire's symbolic journey into Africa marks a departure for its author, who declares he "had to tame and restrain the style I developed in Augie March." Although a powerfully comic tale, the protagonist's adventures and hijinks are interwoven with a thread of spirituality. Henderson confronts death in the jungle and emerges reborn.
1964The Last Analysis. Bellow's farce concerns a comedian whose career is jeopardized by his growing seriousness. He seeks a cure for his "humanitis" by acting out the main events of his life. Despite critic John Simon's contention that it is the most substantial comic drama of the season, the play closes quickly. Bellow would publish the play in 1965 after substantial revision.
1964Herzog. Bellow wins the National Book Award for this novel. It presents the intellectual and academic Moses Herzog, whose life is spinning out of control, forcing him to reassess his Jewish heritage and responsibilities in a series of meditations and letters to friends, family, and the famous.
1968Mosby's Memoirs, and Other Stories. The story collection brings together Bellow's short fiction from the 1950s and newer works, including the title story, about a diplomat's reflections on his life and career.
1970Mr. Sammler's Planet. A seventy-year-old Holocaust survivor contemplates life's meaning on the streets of New York's Upper West Side. Appalled by scenes of moral disorder and decay, he is prevented from attaining the disengagement he desires by an encounter with a black pickpocket. The book is one of Bellow's most blistering critiques of modern American life.
1975Humboldt's Gift. Bellow revisits his relationship with the writer Delmore Schwartz (1913-1966), whose fictitious counterpart, a visionary poet named Von Humboldt Fleischer, suffers the same neglect and premature death. Bellow's surrogate, a writer named Charlie Citrine, and Humboldt embody the fate of artists destroyed by America's materialistic culture--until, that is, Charlie is saved by the success of a comedy about cannibalism that the two friends had written years before Humboldt's death. The ironic revival of Charlie's career is thus "Humboldt's gift."
1976To Jerusalem and Back. Based on his 1975 extended visit to Israel, Bellow addresses the question of Jewish identity in the twentieth century.
1982The Dean's December. Bellow's first novel in seven years is set both in his native Chicago and in Bucharest, Rumania. The narrator compares the anarchy of the West with the state control of the eastern bloc countries and finds both systems lacking, contributing to the destruction of culture that seems to encompass the globe in the waning days of the twentieth century.
1984Him with His Foot in His Mouth and Other Stories. Bellow's collection deals with ordinary people and intellectuals struggling to maintain their personal dignity and manage some form of affirmation. Along with the title work, it includes "Cousins," "A Silver Dish," "What Kind of a Day Did You Have?" and "Zetland: By a Character Witness."
1987More Die of Heartbreak. This comic novel is largely the monologue of Kenneth Trachtenberg, a Russian history expert who tells the story of his uncle, Benn Crader, a botanist. Though perhaps it is less ambitious than Bellow's greatest novels, critics nevertheless find in this work a continuation of Bellow's concern with the way the world of ideas crosses the world of human characters.
1989The Theft. Bellow's novella focuses on a fashion writer whose stability and assumptions about life are shattered when a ring is stolen, prompting a reassessment of her faith in the power of love. Bellow also publishes The Bellarosa Connection, a stylish novella that probes the nature of American identity and the place of Jews in American culture. The wealthy narrator reminisces about Greenwich Village life in the 1940s, when he was earning his intellectual credentials, feeling very young and callow, and confronting the awesome literary heights he wanted to scale.
1997The Actual. Bellow's novella concerns a businessman's return to his Chicago hometown and new encounter with a former love in an elegiac portrait of the tenacity of first love and the search for the real.

 
Quotes By: Saul Bellow
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Quotes:

"There are evils that have the ability to survive identification and go on for ever... money, for instance, or war."

"Goodness is achieved not in a vacuum, but in the company of other men, attended by love."

"As for types like my own, obscurely motivated by the conviction that our existence was worthless if we didn't make a turning point of it, we were assigned to the humanities, to poetry, philosophy, painting -- the nursery games of humankind, which had to be left behind when the age of science began. The humanities would be called upon to choose a wallpaper for the crypt, as the end drew near."

"Any artist should be grateful for a na?ve grace which puts him beyond the need to reason elaborately."

"Everybody knows there is no fineness or accuracy of suppression; if you hold down one thing, you hold down the adjoining."

"The fact that there are so many weak, poor and boring stories and novels written and published in America has been ascribed by our rebels to the horrible squareness of our institutions, the idiocy of power, the debasement of sexual instincts, and the failure of writers to be alienated enough. The poems and novels of these same rebellious spirits, and their theoretical statements, are grimy and gritty and very boring too, besides being nonsensical, and it is evident by now that polymorphous sexuality and vehement declarations of alienation are not going to produce great works of art either."

See more famous quotes by Saul Bellow

 
Wikipedia: Saul Bellow
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Saul Bellow

Saul Bellow at the Miami Book Fair International of 1990
Born Solomon Bellows
June 10, 1915(1915-06-10)
Lachine, Quebec, Canada
Died April 5, 2005 (aged 89)
Brookline, Massachusetts, United States
Nationality Canadian/American
Notable award(s) Nobel Prize in Literature
1976

Saul Bellow (June 10, 1915 – April 5, 2005) was a Canadian-born American writer of Russian-Jewish origin. For his literary contributions, Bellow was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, the Nobel Prize for Literature, and the National Medal of Arts.[1] He is the only writer to have won the National Book Award three times, and the only writer to have been nominated for it six times.

In the words of the Swedish Nobel committee, his writing exhibited "exuberant ideas, flashing irony, hilarious comedy and burning compassion... the mixture of rich picaresque novel and subtle analysis of our culture, of entertaining adventure, drastic and tragic episodes in quick succession interspersed with philosophic conversation, all developed by a commentator with a witty tongue and penetrating insight into the outer and inner complications that drive us to act, or prevent us from acting, and that can be called the dilemma of our age." [2] His best-known works include The Adventures of Augie March, Herzog, Seize the Day, Humboldt's Gift and Ravelstein. Widely regarded as one of the twentieth century's greatest authors, Bellow has had a "huge literary influence". [3]

Contents

Early life

Saul Bellow was born "Solomon Bello"[4] in Lachine, Quebec, two years after his parents emigrated from Saint Petersburg, Russia. Bellow celebrated his birthday in June, although he may have been born in July (in the Jewish community, it was customary to record the Hebrew date of birth, which does not always coincide with the Gregorian calendar).[5] Of his family's emigration, Bellow wrote:

The retrospective was strong in me because of my parents. They were both full of the notion that they were falling, falling. They had been prosperous cosmopolitans in Saint Petersburg. My mother could never stop talking about the family dacha, her privileged life, and how all that was now gone. She was working in the kitchen. Cooking, washing, mending... There had been servants in Russia... But you could always transpose from your humiliating condition with the help of a sort of embittered irony.[6]

A period of illness from a respiratory infection at age eight both taught him self-reliance (he was a very fit man despite his sedentary occupation) and provided an opportunity to satisfy his hunger for reading: reportedly he decided to be a writer when he first read Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin.

When Bellow was nine, his family moved to the Humboldt Park neighborhood of Chicago, the city that was to form the backdrop of many of his novels.[4] Bellow's father, Abraham, was an onion importer. He also worked in a bakery and delivered coal and as a bootlegger.[5] Bellow's mother, Liza, died when he was 17. She was deeply religious, and wanted her youngest son, Saul, to become a rabbi or a concert violinist. But he rebelled against what he later called the "suffocating orthodoxy" of his religious upbringing, and he began writing at a young age.[5] Bellow's lifelong love for the Bible began at four when he learned Hebrew. Bellow also grew up reading William Shakespeare and the great Russian novelists of the 19th century.[5] In Chicago, he took part in anthroposophical studies.

Education and early career

Bellow attended the University of Chicago, but later transferred to Northwestern University. He originally wanted to study literature, but he felt the English department to be anti-Jewish and instead he graduated with honors in anthropology and sociology.[7] It has been suggested Bellow's study of anthropology had an interesting influence on his literary style, and anthropological references pepper his works. Bellow later did graduate work at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. John Podhoretz, a student at the University of Chicago, said that Bellow and Allan Bloom, a close friend of Bellow (see Ravelstein), "inhaled books and ideas the way the rest of us breathe air."

In the 1930s, Bellow was part of the Chicago branch of the Works Progress Administration Writer's Project, which included such future Chicago literary luminaries as Richard Wright and Nelson Algren. Most of the writers were radical: if they were not card-carrying members of the Communist Party USA, they were sympathetic to the cause. Bellow was a Trotskyist, but because of the greater numbers of Stalinist-leaning writers he had to suffer their taunts.[8]

In 1941 Bellow became a naturalized US citizen.[9]

During World War II, Bellow joined the merchant marine and during his service he completed his first novel, Dangling Man (1944) about a young Chicago man waiting to be drafted for the war.

From 1946 through 1948 Bellow taught at the University of Minnesota, living on Commonwealth Avenue, in St. Paul, Minnesota.[10]

In 1948, Bellow was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship that allowed him to move to Paris, where he began writing The Adventures of Augie March (1953). Critics have remarked on the resemblance between Bellow's picaresque novel and the great 17th Century Spanish classic Don Quixote. The book starts with one of American literature's most famous opening paragraphs, and it follows its titular character through a series of careers and encounters, as he lives by his wits and his resolve. Written in a colloquial yet philosophical style, The Adventures of Augie March established Bellow's reputation as a major author.

Returns to Chicago

Bellow lived in New York City for a number of years, but he returned to Chicago in 1962 as a professor at the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago. The committee's goal was to have professors work closely with talented graduate students on a multi-disciplinary approach to learning. Bellow taught on the committee for more than 30 years, alongside his close friend, the philosopher Allan Bloom.

There were also other reasons for Bellow's return to Chicago, where he moved into the Hyde Park neighborhood with his third wife, Susan Glassman. Bellow found Chicago to be vulgar but vital, and more representative of America than New York.[11] He was able to stay in contact with old high school friends and a broad cross-section of society. In a 1982 profile, Bellow's neighborhood was described as a high-crime area in the city's center, and Bellow maintained he had to live in such a place as a writer and "stick to his guns".[12]

Bellow hit the bestseller list in 1964 with his novel Herzog. Bellow was surprised at the commercial success of this cerebral novel about a middle-aged and troubled college professor who writes letters to friends, scholars and the dead, but never sends them. Bellow returned to his exploration of mental instability, and its relationship to genius, in his 1975 novel Humboldt's Gift. Bellow used his late friend and rival, the brilliant but self-destructive poet Delmore Schwartz, as his model for the novel's title character, Von Humboldt Fleisher.[13]

Wins Nobel Prize

Saul Bellow (left) with Keith Botsford ca 1992

Propelled by the success of Humboldt's Gift, Bellow won the Nobel Prize in literature in 1976. In the 70-minute address he gave to an audience in Stockholm, Sweden, Bellow called on writers to be beacons for civilization and awaken it from intellectual torpor.[13]

The following year, the National Endowment for the Humanities selected Bellow for the Jefferson Lecture, the U.S. federal government's highest honor for achievement in the humanities. Bellow's lecture was entitled "The Writer and His Country Look Each Other Over."[14]

Bellow traveled widely throughout his life, mainly to Europe, which he sometimes visited twice a year.[13] As a young man, Bellow went to Mexico City to meet Leon Trotsky, but the expatriate Russian revolutionary was assassinated the day before they were to meet. Bellow's social contacts were wide and varied. He tagged along with Robert F. Kennedy for a magazine profile he never wrote, he was close friends with the author Ralph Ellison and he rubbed shoulders with Chicago gangsters.[citation needed] His many friends included the journalist Sydney J. Harris and the poet John Berryman.[citation needed]

While sales of Bellow's first few novels were modest, that turned around with Herzog. Bellow continued teaching well into his old age, enjoying its human interaction and exchange of ideas. He taught at the University of Minnesota, New York University, Princeton University, the University of Puerto Rico, the University of Chicago, Bard College and Boston University, where he co-taught a class with James Wood ('modestly absenting himself' when it was time to discuss Seize the Day). In order to take up his appointment at Boston, Bellow moved in 1993 from Chicago to Brookline, Massachusetts, where he died on April 5, 2005, at age 89. He is buried at the Jewish cemetery Shir HeHarim of Brattleboro, Vermont.

Bellow was married five times, with all but his last marriage ending in divorce. His son by his second marriage, Adam, published a nonfiction book In Praise of Nepotism in 2003. Bellow's wives were Anita Goshkin, Alexandra Tsachacbasov, Susan Glassman, Alexandra Ionescu Tulcea and Janis Freedman. In 1999, when he was 84, Bellow had a daughter, his fourth child, with Freedman.

While he read voluminously, Bellow also played the violin and followed sports. Work was a constant for him, but he at times toiled at a plodding pace on his novels, frustrating the publishing company.[13]

His early works earned him the reputation as one of the foremost novelists of the 20th century, and by his death he was widely regarded to be one of the greatest living novelists. [15] He was the first novelist to win the National Book Award three times. His friend and protege Philip Roth has said of him, "The backbone of 20th-century American literature has been provided by two novelists – William Faulkner and Saul Bellow. Together they are the Melville, Hawthorne, and Twain of the 20th century." James Wood, in a eulogy of Bellow in The New Republic, wrote:[16]

I judged all modern prose by his. Unfair, certainly, because he made even the fleet-footed – the Updikes, the DeLillos, the Roths – seem like monopodes. Yet what else could I do? I discovered Saul Bellow's prose in my late teens, and henceforth, the relationship had the quality of a love affair about which one could not keep silent. Over the last week, much has been said about Bellow's prose, and most of the praise—perhaps because it has been overwhelmingly by men—has tended toward the robust: We hear about Bellow's mixing of high and low registers, his Melvillean cadences jostling the jivey Yiddish rhythms, the great teeming democracy of the big novels, the crooks and frauds and intellectuals who loudly people the brilliant sensorium of the fiction. All of this is true enough; John Cheever, in his journals, lamented that, alongside Bellow's fiction, his stories seemed like mere suburban splinters. Ian McEwan wisely suggested last week that British writers and critics may have been attracted to Bellow precisely because he kept alive a Dickensian amplitude now lacking in the English novel. [...] But nobody mentioned the beauty of this writing, its music, its high lyricism, its firm but luxurious pleasure in language itself. [...] [I]n truth, I could not thank him enough when he was alive, and I cannot now.

Themes and style

The author's works speak to the disorienting nature of modern civilization, and the countervailing ability of humans to overcome their frailty and achieve greatness (or at least awareness). Bellow saw many flaws in modern civilization, and its ability to foster madness, materialism and misleading knowledge.[17] Principal characters in Bellow's fiction have heroic potential, and many times they stand in contrast to the negative forces of society. Often these characters are Jewish and have a sense of alienation or otherness.

Jewish life and identity is a major theme in Bellow's work, although he bristled at being called a "Jewish writer." Bellow's work also shows a great appreciation of America, and a fascination with the uniqueness and vibrancy of the American experience.

Bellow's work abounds in references and quotes from the likes of Marcel Proust and Henry James, but he offsets these high-culture references with jokes.[5] Bellow interspersed autobiographical elements into his fiction, and many of his principal characters were said to bear a resemblance to him.

Criticism and controversy

Martin Amis described Bellow as "The greatest American author ever, in my view".[18]

His sentences seem to weigh more than anyone else's. He is like a force of nature. There is a nice part in a short story about when there is a storm in Chicago. And the main character and his father have this terrible mission to go and bum some money off a couple of do-gooders and they have a terrible journey through the storm. He says, "When we emerged from the subway the storm was still having it all its own way in the street." I always thought that one force of nature was recognizing another. He breaks all the rules [...] [T]he people in Bellow's fiction are real people, yet the intensity of the gaze that he bathes them in, somehow through the particular, opens up into the universal.[19]

For Linda Grant, "what Bellow had to tell us in his fiction was that it was worth it, being alive."

His vigour, vitality, humour and passion were always matched by the insistence on thought, not the predigested cliches of the mass media or of those on the left which had begun to disgust him by the Sixties... It's easy to be a 'writer of conscience' - anyone can do it if they want to; just choose your cause. Bellow was a writer about conscience and consciousness, forever conflicted by the competing demands of the great cities, the individual's urge to survival against all odds and his equal need for love and some kind of penetrating understanding of what there was of significance beyond all the racket and racketeering.[20]

On the other hand, Bellow's detractors considered his work conventional and old-fashioned, as if the author was trying to revive the 19th century European novel. In a private letter, Vladimir Nabokov once referred to Bellow as a "miserable mediocrity."[21] Journalist and author Ron Rosenbaum described Bellow's Ravelstein (2000) as the only book that rose above Bellow's failings as an author. Rosenbaum wrote,

My problem with the pre-Ravelstein Bellow is that he all too often strains too hard to yoke together two somewhat contradictory aspects of his being and style. There's the street-wise Windy City wiseguy and then-as if to show off that the wiseguy has Wisdom-there are the undigested chunks of arcane, not entirely impressive, philosophic thought and speculation. Just to make sure you know his novels have intellectual heft. That the world and the flesh in his prose are both figured and transfigured.[22]

Sam Tanenhaus wrote in New York Times Book Review in 2007:

But what, then, of the many defects -- the longueurs and digressions, the lectures on anthroposophy and religion, the arcane reading lists? What of the characters who don't change or grow but simply bristle onto the page, even the colorful lowlifes pontificating like fevered students in the seminars Bellow taught at the University of Chicago? And what of the punitively caricatured ex-wives drawn from the teeming annals of the novelists's own marital discord?

But, Tanenhaus went on to answer his question:

Shortcomings, to be sure. But so what? Nature doesn't owe us perfection. Novelists don't either. Who among us would even recognize perfection if we saw it? In any event, applying critical methods, of whatever sort, seemed futile in the case of an author who, as Randall Jarrell once wrote of Walt Whitman, is a world, a waste with, here and there, systems blazing at random out of the darkness -- those systems as beautifully and astonishingly organized as the rings and satellites of Saturn.[23]

V. S. Pritchett praised Bellow, finding his shorter works to be his best. Pritchett called Bellow's novella Seize the Day a "small gray masterpiece."[5]

Bellow's account of his 1975 trip to Israel, To Jerusalem and Back: A Personal Account, was criticized by Noam Chomsky in his 1983 book Fateful Triangle: the United States, Israel & the Palestinians. Bellow, Chomsky wrote, "sees an Israel where ‘almost everyone is reasonable and tolerant, and rancor against the Arabs is rare,’ where the people ‘think so hard, and so much’ as they ‘farm a barren land, industrialize it, build cities, make a society, do research, philosophize, write books, sustain a great moral tradition, and finally create an army of tough fighters.’ He has also been criticized for having praised Joan Peters's controversial book, From Time Immemorial, which challenged the conventional history of the Palestinian people.[24][25]

Although never beholden to any single political school of thought, as he grew older, Bellow gravitated away from leftist politics and became identified with cultural conservatism.[13] His opponents included feminists, campus revolutionaries and postmodernists, and he thrust himself into the often contentious realm of Jewish and African-American relations. In Mr. Sammler's Planet, Bellow's portrayal of a black pickpocket who exposes himself in public was criticized, by some activists, as racist. In 2007, attempts to name a street after Bellow in his Hyde Park neighborhood were scotched by local alderman on the grounds that Bellow had made remarks about the neighborhood's current inhabitants that they considered racist.[26]

In an interview in the March 7, 1988 New Yorker, Bellow sparked a controversy when he asked, concerning multiculturalism, "Who is the Tolstoy of the Zulus? The Proust of the Papuans? I'd be glad to read him." The taunt was seen by some as a slight against non-Western literature. Bellow at first claimed to have been misquoted. Later, writing in his defense in the New York Times, he said, "The scandal is entirely journalistic in origin... Always foolishly trying to explain and edify all comers, I was speaking of the distinction between literate and preliterate societies. For I was once an anthropology student, you see." Bellow claimed to have remembered shortly after making his infamous comment that he had in fact read a Zulu novel in translation: Chaka by Thomas Mofolo (an inaccuracy remains in this: Mofolo's novel is in Sesotho, not Zulu).

Despite his identification with Chicago, he kept aloof from some of that city's more conventional writers. Studs Terkel in a 2006 interview with Stop Smiling magazine said of Bellow: "I didn't know him too well. We disagreed on a number of things politically. In the protests in the beginning of Norman Mailer's Armies of the Night, when Mailer, Robert Lowell and Paul Goodman were marching to protest the Vietnam War, Bellow was invited to a sort of counter-gathering. He said, 'Of course I'll attend'. But he made a big thing of it. Instead of just saying OK, he was proud of it. So I wrote him a letter and he didn't like it. He wrote me a letter back. He called me a Stalinist. But otherwise, we were friendly. He was a brilliant writer, of course. I love Seize the Day."

Quotations

"[There is] an immense, painful longing for a broader, more flexible, fuller, more coherent, more comprehensive account of what we human beings are, who we are and what this life is for."[27]

"I feel that art has something to do with the achievement of stillness in the midst of chaos. A stillness which characterizes prayer, too, and the eye of the storm. I think that art has something to do with an arrest of attention in the midst of distraction."[28]

"A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep."[29]

"People can lose their lives in libraries. They ought to be warned."[30]

Bibliography

for a complete list of works see Bibliography of Saul Bellow

Novels and novellas

Short Story Collections

  • Mosby's Memoirs (1968)
  • Him with His Foot in His Mouth (1984)
  • Something to Remember Me By: Three Tales (1991)
  • Collected Stories (2001)

Library of America editions

  • Novels 1944-1953: Dangling Man, The Victim, The Adventures of Augie March (2003)
  • Novels 1956-1964: Seize the Day, Henderson the Rain King, Herzog (2007)

Translations

Non-Fiction

  • To Jerusalem and Back (1976) - Memoir
  • It All Adds Up (1994) - Essay collection

Works about Saul Bellow

  • Saul Bellow, Tony Tanner (1965) (see also his City of Words [1971])
  • Saul Bellow, Malcolm Bradbury (1982)
  • Saul Bellow: Modern Critical Views, Harold Bloom (Ed.) (1986)
  • Handsome Is: Adventures with Saul Bellow, Harriet Wasserman (1997)
  • Saul Bellow and the Decline of Humanism, Michael K Glenday (1990)
  • Bellow: A Biography, James Atlas (2000)
  • "Even Later" and "The American Eagle" in Martin Amis, The War Against Cliché (2001) are celebratory. The latter essay is also found in the Everyman's Library edition of Augie March.
  • 'Saul Bellow's comic style': James Wood in The Irresponsible Self: On Laughter and the Novel, 2004. ISBN 0224064509.
  • The Hero in Contemporary American Fiction: The Works of Saul Bellow and Don DeLillo , Stephanie Halldorson (forthcoming December 2007)

See also

References

  1. ^ University of Chicago accolades - National Medal of Arts. Accessed 2008-03-08.
  2. ^ [1] Press Release: The Nobel Prize in Literature, 1976, Swedish Academy
  3. ^ Obituary: Saul Bellow BBC News, Tuesday, 5 April, 2005
  4. ^ a b http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/11/04/arts/trbellow.php
  5. ^ a b c d e f Mel Gussow and Charles McGrath, Saul Bellow, Who Breathed Life Into American Novel, Dies at 89, The New York Times April 6, 2005. Accessed 2008-10-21. "...his birthdate is listed as either June or July 10, 1915, though his lawyer, Mr. Pozen, said yesterday that Mr. Bellow customarily celebrated in June. (Immigrant Jews at that time tended to be careless about the Christian calendar, and the records are inconclusive.)"
  6. ^ Saul Bellow, It All Adds Up (Penguin, 2007), pages 295-6.
  7. ^ The New York Times obituary, April 6, 2005. "He had hoped to study literature but was put off by what he saw as the tweedy anti-Semitism of the English department, and graduated in 1937 with honors in anthropology and sociology, subjects that were later to instill his novels."
  8. ^ Drew, Bettina. Nelson Algren, A Life on the Wild Side. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1991
  9. ^ Slater, Elinor; Robert Slater (1996). "SAUL BELLOW: Winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature". Great Jewish Men. Jonathan David Company. pp. 42. ISBN 0824603818. http://books.google.com/books?id=T91sokr_nJYC&pg=PA42&dq=bellow+naturalized+citizen&sig=Z1uJ1PxtO0mB-Zh_Fnzvv17WQgI. Retrieved on 2007-10-21. 
  10. ^ http://www.saulbellow.org/NavigationBar/LifeandWorks.html
  11. ^ The New York Times Book Review, December 13, 1981
  12. ^ Vogue, March 1982
  13. ^ a b c d e Atlas, James. Bellow: A Biography. New York: Random House, 2000.
  14. ^ Jefferson Lecturers at NEH Website (retrieved January 22, 2009).
  15. ^ 'He was the first true immigrant voice' The Observer, Sunday 10 April 2005
  16. ^ Wood, James, 'Gratitude', New Republic, 00286583, 4/25/2005, Vol. 232, Issue 15
  17. ^ Malin, Irving. Saul Bellow's Fiction. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1969
  18. ^ [http://www.identitytheory.com/interviews/birnbaum135.php Martin Amis Author of Yellow Dog talks with Robert Birnbaum] December 8, 2003, by Robert Birnbaum
  19. ^ Martin Amis Author of Yellow Dog talks with Robert Birnbaum, Identity Theory, December 8, 2003, by Robert Birnbaum
  20. ^ 'He was the first true immigrant voice' Linda grant, The Observer, Sunday 10 April 2005
  21. ^ Wood, James (February 1, 1990) "Private Strife." Guardian Unlimited.
  22. ^ Rosenbaum, Ron. "Saul Bellow and the Bad Fish." Slate. 3 Apr 2007
  23. ^ Tanenhaus, Sam (February 4, 2007) "Beyond Criticism." New York Times Book Review.
  24. ^ Review: The Joan Peters Case, Edward W. Said, Journal of Palestine Studies, 15:2 (Winter, 1986), pp. 144-150. Accessed 2008-03-27.
  25. ^ The Fate of an Honest Intellectual, Noam Chomsky (2002), in Understanding Power, The New Press, pp. 244-248. Accessed on 2008-03-27.
  26. ^ Ahmed, Azam and Ron Grossman (October 5, 2007) "Bellow's remarks on race haunt legacy in Hyde Park." Chicago Tribune.
  27. ^ Saul Bellow's Nobel Lecture, December 12, 1976.
  28. ^ Alfred Kazin and George Plimpton (eds.), Writers at Work: The Paris review interviews, Volume 3. New York, NY: Viking Press, 1967. ISBN 0-67079-096-6.
  29. ^ Saul Bellow, To Jerusalem and Back: A personal account, p. 127. Penguin Classics, 1976. ISBN 0-14118-075-7.
  30. ^ Quoted in Steven Gilbar, The Reader's Quotation Book: A literary companion. Wainscott, NY: Pushcart Press, 1990. ISBN 0-91636-664-2.

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