Category Archives: book reviews by Roger W. Smith

Roger W. Smith, review of “The Ox-Bow Man: A Biography of Walter Van Tilburg Clark,” by Jackson J. Benson

 

The Ox-Bow Man: A Biography of Walter Van Tilburg Clark

by Jackson J. Benson

University of Nevada Press, 426 pages, $34.95

reviewed by Roger W. Smith

 

A biography of Walter Van Tilburg Clark, whose beloved home state of Nevada is the setting for all of his major works, is very welcome at this time. Clark’s short story collection, “The Watchful Gods and Other Stories,” has been republished by the University of Nevada Press to coincide with the publication of this biography. Two of his lesser-known novels, “The City of Trembling Leaves” and “The Track of the Cat: A Novel,” are available in reprint editions. And, Clark will, of course, always be remembered as the author of his austere and finely crafted Western novel, “The Ox-Bow Incident,” and the critically acclaimed 1943 film based on the book, as the title of this book indicates.

Clark has a secure place among the ranks of Western writers — he was admired by contemporaries such as Wallace Stegner whose critical opinion counts — and while he is not quite in fashion today, he has never been entirely out of fashion.

The author of biographies of John Steinbeck and Stegner, Jackson Benson brings a reporter’s doggedness, a writer’s sensibilities and intimate knowledge of Clark’s Nevada to the task of writing this long-overdue biography. He seems to have interviewed everyone who ever knew Clark; has had the invaluable cooperation of Clark’s son, Robert, and his daughter, Barbara; has made excellent use of letters and unpublished manuscripts in the author’s papers at the University of Nevada to reconstruct events in his life and career; and provides an impressive amount of biographical detail that is not dull or cloying from the reader’s perspective.

Mr. Benson develops a rounded picture of Clark the man and the writer by viewing him from many different angles: the son of a prominent academic (his father, Walter Ernest Clark, was president of the University of Nevada from 1917-1938), avid tennis player, chess enthusiast, devoted husband and father, high school English teacher and athletic coach during the 1930s and ‘40s and, after he had become a successful writer, itinerant college professor in various writing programs.

We learn that Clark greatly admired California poet Robinson Jeffers, who was an important early influence; was thoroughly steeped in Arthurian legend (which provided the basis for a unique master’s thesis in the form of a narrative poem he completed at the University of Nevada; he earned a second master’s at the University of Vermont with a thesis on Jeffers); had an important and enduring friendship (described in his Kunstlerroman “The City of Trembling Leaves”) with Nevada painter Robert Caples; wrote unpublished poetry throughout his lifetime; and believed in writing swiftly without much retooling. He felt that if a story didn’t come naturally, it wasn’t worth persisting.

Clark died of cancer in 1971 at the age of 62. He was blocked and frustrated and stopped publishing altogether after the publication of his last major work, the above-mentioned collection of short stories, in 1950. The problem of why his creative output declined in middle age — a conflict between the demands of teaching and writing seems to have been a major cause, his self-imposed critical standards another — is one that Mr. Benson examines at length and with sensitivity.

It is hard to imagine this biography being surpassed in the foreseeable future. It’s an affecting, at times sad, but always edifying story. It sheds light on the tugs, pulls and challenges that the writing life and avocation can present in practical terms and on the difficulty of maintaining one’s integrity and creative output in the face of such challenges.

Mr. Smith is a freelance writer and editor based in Maspeth, Queens.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

   November 2015

Roger W. Smith, review of “Hetty: The Madness of America’s First Female Tycoon,” by Charles Slack

 

By ROGER W. SMITH

Hetty: The Genius and Madness of America’s First Female Tycoon

by Charles Slack

Ecco, 272 pages, $25.95

 

Henrietta Howland (Robinson) Green was, at the time of her death in 1916, believed to be the wealthiest woman in America. She left an estate valued at $100-200 million and ranks roughly in the top third (a few places behind Bill Gates and slightly ahead of Warren Buffet) on a list of the one hundred wealthiest Americans. She is the only woman on the list.

Her shabby black attire and strange off-putting ways earned her the sobriquet “the witch of Wall Street” and a reputation both in her own day and ever since as the quintessential miser. For years she maintained an unofficial office at the Chemical National Bank at 270 Broadway to which she commuted from a cheap apartment in Hoboken when she could have lived luxuriously among the rich.

There is, Charles Slack acknowledges in this well researched and written biography, at least a grain of truth in most of the unflattering tales and legends about Hetty. But Mr. Slack digs deeper and tries to distinguish between the truth and fiction in them. He does a good job of assessing Hetty Green as she really was: course, unpretentious, sometimes mean and vindictive to business rivals, not callous (as was often alleged) but caring and nurturing as a parent, and quite attractive in her younger years.

Regarding Hetty’s supposed unhappiness and loneliness, the common belief that she was filthy rich but had an unfulfilling life (she lived separately from her businessman husband for many years but remained on good terms with him), he points out, perceptively, that “independence was her pride and strength” — in other words, much of what put people off about her was her way of maintaining a sense of selfhood. He notes that her business judgment and timing were brilliant and her financial maxims sound: “buy cheap and sell dearly,” “never speculate on Wall Street,” and, above all, don’t panic when others do.

Mr. Slack does not dwell, wisely (since it has been thoroughly covered elsewhere), on a central event in Hetty’s story, the famous Howland Will Case, involving the estate of her aunt Sylvia Ann Howland, which Hetty in effect lost and in which she came off badly (having, it would seem, committed forgery). He does, however, make excellent use of court transcripts to throw light on her selfishness and manipulative behavior as attested to by members of her aunt’s household who testified against her.

The use of chapter “source notes” rather than footnotes, which was probably done to save space, makes it hard to verify where much of the material, including quotations attributed to Hetty and various detractors, comes from. Is this a new trend in nonfiction book publishing? One hopes not.

One gets the feeling that the publisher had a fixed page length in mind for this book. A longer book would have given the author a chance to spend more time straightening out the tangled strands of Hetty’s life (just keeping up with her peripatetic life trajectory is a daunting task for the biographer) and to give more weight to events and observations that he has been forced to treat less than fully at times. I think that would have made Hetty’s importance as a biographical subject clearer to the reader. This book does provide valuable insights into the reasons behind Hetty’s financial success, something prior biographies have not done as well.

Mr. Smith is a freelance writer and editor based in Maspeth, Queens who last wrote for these pages about Walt Whitman.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

   November 2015

 

 

review of On the Banks of the Wabash: The Life and Music of Paul Dresser by Clayton W. Henderson (a biography of Paul Dresser)

reviewed by Roger W.  Smith

Indianapolis Star

September 27, 2003

 

rws-review-of-on-the-banks-of-the-wabash-indianapolis-star-9-27-20031

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

  November 2015