Gore Vidal's AmericaISBN: 978-0-7456-3363-3
Paperback
220 pages
October 2005, Polity
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-- Alex Danchev, Times Higher Education
Supplement
"Dennis Altman has certainly evoked with great thoroughness a
now lost world – American and European – ranging from
Depression to World War II to the decline of the Hollywood studios
to the rise of global television, not to mention that global empire
to which his protagonist stands so edgily aslant."
-- Gore Vidal
"Dennis Altman, it turns out, is the perfect person to write a
study of Gore Vidal. A revolutionary thinker in his own right, a
long-time friend of Vidal, an Australian, Altman has the ideal
perspective on America’s grand old expatriate of letters and
politics. In this exciting portrait Altman gives us Vidal alive and
well and more radical than ever. This is a profound picture of
Vidal’s thought, not just a trivial biography of his
quirks."
-- Edmund White
"Dennis Altman has written what amounts to the finest work yet
published on Gore Vidal. Altman understands the unique role Vidal
has played -- as novelist, playwright, and essayist -- in defining
and critiquing American culture from the inside, as someone who has
both watched the culture evolve and played a role in its
production. This wise, beautifully written, and insightful book
will stimulate discussion for years to come."
-- Jay Parini, Middlebury College
"Dennis Altman is well placed to unravel the paradox of Gore
Vidal, concentrating here on his politics, sexuality and love-hate
relationship with the US. This study is every bit as fascinating as
the great man himself."
Gay Times
"Altman's main purpose is to provide a detailed analysis of
Vidal's long and prolific career and he succeeds brilliantly in
this aim. Vidal's extraordinary productivity means that Altman has
a great deal of primary material to work with, but he marshals his
forty and more key texts with remarkable ease. It is a long time
since I've experienced such clarity in a critical work of this
kind; Altman has a positive but open style, which directs the
reader without ever shutting out the possibility of alternative
readings of the Vidal oeuvre."
Laurie N Ede, Screening the Past