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Shoot the Widow: Adventures of a Biographer in Search of Her Subject

Shoot the Widow: Adventures of a Biographer in Search of Her Subject

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Author: Meryle Secrest
Publisher: Knopf
Category: Book

List Price: $25.95
Buy New: $5.09
You Save: $20.86 (80%)



New (33) from $5.09

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 473634

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 256
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 5.5 x 1.1

ISBN: 0307264831
Dewey Decimal Number: 920.72
EAN: 9780307264831
ASIN: 0307264831

Publication Date: June 5, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: Brand new book. Great Condition. Great source of info!

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

The first rule of biography, wrote Justin Kaplan: “Shoot the widow.”

In her new book, Meryle Secrest, acclaimed biographer (“Knowing, sympathetic and entertainingly droll”—The New York Times), writes about her comic triumphs and misadventures as a biographer in search of her nine celebrated subjects, about how the hunt for a “life” is like working one’s way through a maze, full of fall starts, dead ends, and occasional clear passages leading to the next part of the puzzle.

She writes about her first book, a life of Romaine Brooks, and how she was led to Nice and given invaluable letters by her subject’s heir that were slid across the table, one at a time; how she was led to the villa of Brooks’ lover, Gabriele d’Annunzio (poet, playwright, and aviator), a fantastic mausoleum left untouched since the moment of his death seventy years before; to a small English village, where she uncovered a lost Romaine Brooks painting; and finally, to 20, rue Jacob, Paris, where Romaine’s lover, Natalie Barney, had fifty years before entertained Cocteau, Gide, Proust, Colette, and others.

Secrest describes how her next book—a life of Berenson—prompted Francis Steegmuller, fellow biographer, to comment that he wouldn’t touch the subject with a ten-foot pole.

For her life of British art historian Kenneth Clark, Secrest was given permission to write the book by her subject, who surreptitiously financed it in the hopes of controlling its contents; we see how Clark’s plan was foiled by a jealous mistress and a stash of love letters that helped Secrest navigate Clark’s obstacle course.

Among the other biographical (mis)adventures, Secrest reveals: how she tracked Salvador Dali to a hospital room, found him recovering from serious burns sustained in a mysterious fire, and learned that he was knee-deep in a scandal involving fake drawings and prints and surrounded by dangerous characters out of Murder, Inc. . . . and how she went in search of a subject’s grave (Frank Lloyd Wright’s) only to find that his body had been dug up to satisfy the whim of his last wife.

A fascinating account of a life spent in sometimes arduous, sometimes comical, always exciting pursuit of the truth about other lives.




Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars How to write successful, but not great biography   August 22, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Writing a biography is extremely difficult. It takes a great deal of effort and time, and the results usually do not please the people closest to the one written about. I know this from personal experience having spent more than five years writing a biography which I hoped would make the world want to know more about one who in my judgment was a great Jewish leader, Rabbi Shlomo Goren.
Meryle Secrest is the author of among others biographies of Bernard Berenson, Kenneth Clark, Salvador Dali, Frank Lloyd Wright, Steven Sondheim, Leonard Bernstein and Richard Rogers. In this memoir she describes her experiences as a biographer, though there is too much autobiographical information which tells how a Secrest worked her way to an honored place both in journalism and as a biographer.
Among the secrets of the trade she reveals is the one suggested by the title. The close relatives, especially the widow can be the bane of the biographer in denying access to important materials, letters, archives, etc. Family members want to see their honored representative in a good light and do not want the skeletons in the closet revealed. Here the most instructive story relates to Secrest's writing of the Kenneth Clark biography. All was cooperation and sweetness at first but then when it became apparent that the story of Clark's first wife's alcoholism, and his frequent dalliances were going to be part of the story the tone and situation changed. Here Secrest herself became a bit two- faced in her dealings.
It is interesting that Secrest presents herself as a certain kind of biographer, what might be called the 'commercial biographer'. There are biographers who become so devoted to the study of their subject that they virtually give their life-work to it. One thinks of Leon Edel with his five- volume biography of Henry James. But Secrest clearly explains it is not her absolute devotion and desire to understand to the depths which motivates her but rather a combination of real interest and commercial prospect. Her subjects are people who have been very successful, who there is a great public curiosity about.
Another element in her work is what be called finding the 'secret element' often the 'dirty secret element' This is the set of facts which is the great revelation of the inquiry the new stuff which then leads to the marketing hype around the book. But as Louis Menand points out in an instructive article on this book in the 'New Yorker' explaining the apparent gift, the valuable public thing by the secret small private one is an extremely dubious practice..
Secrest is considered a very respectable, workmanlike biographer. She is not aiming to be Johnson's Boswell, and she does not perhaps go deep enough into her subjects to give us the great and memorable work. But she is a hard- working, inventive, and amusing story-teller who has written an instructive and entertaining book.



5 out of 5 stars Teller of Tales   June 25, 2007
 9 out of 10 found this review helpful

I read this book on a recent jaunt to LA and believe me, I didn't want it ever to end. I kept hoping that Meryle Secrest would reveal more and more data about her methods as a biographer.

That review from PW by James Atlas was just offbase in every possible way, culminating in his snidely separating Secrest from his precious rank of "great biographers" (note that every example he lists is a male writer, and this is said to have been "at random"). He's just way off base. Over the years I've read many of Secrest's biographies (though not all) and one has to admire her range, though Atlas says this is a sign of weakness and she should have stuck to a very limited cast of characters. If she had just stuck to Kenneth Clark and Berenson he would have had more respect for her I assume. But in reality, it is orecisely her willingness to jump in with both feet into a field she had previously left alone that makes her unique. When she wrote about Dali people said, "She knows nothing about surrealism," and when she turned to Frank Lloyd Wright there were complaints that she knew little about architecture. I hear people say that she knows nothing about musical theater and should have stayed away from Sondheim and Richard Rodgers. Well, maybe so, maybe not. But in SHOOT THE WIDOW we can now discover what gave Meryle Secrest her zest for the unknown. For she tells the story of her own life and sensitively, yet persuasively, makes you feel what it must have been like for a poor English girl uprooted out of a humble yet safe life in the UK and brought over on a troop ship and dragged halfway across Canada (to Hamilton) on a cross country nightmare train voyage, and set down in a lakeland paradise completely despoiled by steel mills.

There your Meryle learned the ABCs of journalism, as a way of escaping her personal and emotional circumstance. This part of SHOOT THE WIDOW is a real inspiration, as is her account of the great discovery she made while writing the life of the painter Romaine Brooks: in her entire mansion Brooks kept only one picture of a man, but who was he? Through amazing luck and a cool head, Secrest discovers a painting of the exact same guy, and when she reproduces them on adjoining pages we can see they're identical, and so she was able to solve the single biggest conundrum in Brooks' life. As a biographer myself I give her sleuthing four stars. As for her qualms about the family of her subjects, and how the family can reach in and try to quash the biographer's revelations (as happened to her with Kenneth Clark's family), it is a sobering possibility. Apparently those in Clark's family who gave her grief are all now dead, and she is having a fine old time dancing on their graves!

A friend told me some years ago that Meryle is the mother of Ryan Seacrest from AMERICAN IDOL but this is apparently not the case. No worries, she has accomplished plenty without having to depend on siring a famous son for validation.


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