NP - for the Lit freaks

Mark Kohut mark.kohut at gmail.com
Mon Jun 13 03:26:37 CDT 2016


And where do we see most Wolfe's influence on TRP? 


Sent from my iPad

> On Jun 13, 2016, at 3:08 AM, matthew cissell <mccissell at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> You might be a lit freak if a movie about Maxwell Perkins and Thomas Wolfe gets you excited. You're probably a Thomas Wolfe fan if the casting of Jude law for The Gigantic writer dimmed your hopes a bit. (To be fair, it must be nigh impossible to find someone as big as Wolfe but with talent for delivering lines.)
> 
>   I know Wolfe's purple prose is out of fashion but he really does deserve more attention than he receives, if not just for his writing than for his story. How many other writers were there to cheer Jesse Owens right under Adolph's stupid 'stache? Oh, and let's not forget that when Wolfe saw what was happening in Germany in the late 30's it turned him from his germanophilia.
> 
> Wolfe is a very important influence for US lit. Kerouac clearly was influenced by Wolfe, but so was Bukowski and even our dear old Pynchon. 
> 
> What's more, the relationship between Perkins and Wolfe lends credence to Joshua Shenk's argument in The Power of Two that relationships are often what lie behind cultural production rather than the "myth of the lone genius has towered over us, its shadow obscuring the way creative work really gets done." So what does that leave us to ponder about TP?
> 
> ciao
> mc
> 
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