Philip Roth, Blake Bailey
Philip Roth, Blake Bailey
List: $29.99 | Sale: $21.00
Club: $14.99

Philip Roth
The Biography

Author: Blake Bailey

Narrator: George Guidall

Unabridged: 31 hr 46 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/04/2021


Synopsis

"I don't want you to rehabilitate me," Philip Roth said to his only authorized biographer, Blake Bailey. "Just make me interesting." Granted complete independence and access, Bailey spent almost ten years poring over Roth's personal archive, interviewing his friends, lovers, and colleagues, and listening to Roth's own breathtakingly candid confessions. Cynthia Ozick, in her front-page rave for the New York Times Book Review, described Bailey's monumental biography as "a narrative masterwork … As in a novel, what is seen at first to be casual chance is revealed at last to be a steady and powerfully demanding drive. … under Bailey's strong light what remains on the page is one writer's life as it was lived, and-almost-as it was felt."    Though Roth is generally considered an autobiographical novelist—his alter-egos include not only the Roth-like writer Nathan Zuckerman, but also a recurring character named Philip Roth—relatively little is known about the actual life on which so vast an oeuvre was supposedly based. Bailey reveals a man who, by design, led a highly compartmentalized life: a tireless champion of dissident writers behind the Iron Curtain on the one hand, Roth was also the Mickey Sabbath-like roué who pursued scandalous love affairs and aspired "[t]o affront and affront and affront till there was no one on earth unaffronted"—the man who was pilloried by his second wife, the actress Claire Bloom, in her 1996 memoir, Leaving a Doll's House.    Towering above it all was Roth's achievement: thirty-one books that give us "the truest picture we have of the way we live now," as the poet Mark Strand put it in his remarks for Roth's Gold Medal at the 2001 American Academy of Arts and Letters ceremonial. Tracing Roth's path from realism to farce to metafiction to the tragic masterpieces of the American Trilogy, Bailey explores Roth's engagement with nearly every aspect of postwar American culture.

About Blake Bailey

Blake Bailey is the author of award-winning biographies of John Cheever, Richard Yates, and Charles Jackson, and he is at work on the authorized biography of Philip Roth. His articles and reviews have appeared in Vanity Fair, Slate, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and elsewhere. He lives in Virginia with his wife and daughter.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Ryan on November 05, 2023

Philip Roth generated more outrage than any American writer since Henry Miller. The mere mention of his name triggers a multi-channel set of associations: Roth the joker, Roth the sex-fiend; Roth the celebrated, Roth the ego on legs. Neither judge nor jury, Blake Bailey’s biography presents Roth the......more

Goodreads review by Glenn on September 07, 2021

Philip Roth, who died in 2018 at age 85, was an important, prolific writer and a complicated man. Blake Bailey’s massive 900-page biography does him and his impressive body of work – some 31 books – justice. With a few caveats. Indirectly, it also sheds light on the challenges of writing about a man......more

Goodreads review by Mary on May 11, 2021

I was saddened and angered when Norton decided not to promote this fine work of non fiction. Due to some claims that Mr. Bailey was sexually inappropriate with two women from his past, his work is now "verboten". I am an extreme liberal but the idea of "cancelling" a person's work due to their past......more

Goodreads review by Stewart on April 25, 2021

Earlier this week, WW Norton announced that they were ceasing promotion for and canceling a second printing of Philip Roth’s official biography because his biographer, Blake Bailey, has been credibly accused of rape by two different women, among other accusations. This is so completely on the nose t......more

Goodreads review by Michael on December 18, 2021

I know this is a controversial read because the author was caught up in the #MeToo movement with credible accusations made against him, but as he gains no money or notoriety from my reading a library copy of the book, I grabbed it at the American Library and was glad I did. It is a very compelling p......more