|
Sample text
Next title
Previous title
|
In 1937 Gertrude Stein wrote a sequel to The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, but this darker and more complex work has been long misunderstood and neglected. An account of her experiences as a result of writing a bestseller, Everybody’s Autobiography is as funny and engaging as The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, but it is also a searing meditation on the meaning of success and identity in America. Posing as the representative American, Stein transforms her story into history responding to the tradition of Thoreau and Henry Adams, she writes: "I used to be fond of saying that America, which was supposed to be a land of success, was a land of failure. Most of the great men in America had a long life of early failure and a long life of later failure." Everybody’s Autobiography is Stein at her most accessible and her most serious; it should prove to be among her most popular books.
"Everybody’s Autobiography is among the very best of Gertrude’s writing… [it] speaks with the true and original voice of Gertrude Stein, without apparent art or bravado." Janet Hobhouse
"Stein knew everybody who was anybody, and in this title, she spills the dope on them all." Library Journal
|