Full of Life: A Biography of John Fante

Full of Life: A Biography of John Fante

by StephenCooper (Author)

Synopsis

The first biography of one of the great outsiders of American literature. In the first comprehensive biography of John Fante, one of the great lost souls of twentieth-century literature, Stephen Cooper untangles the enigma of an authentic American original. By turns savage and poetic, violent and full of love, such underground novels as The Road to Los Angeles; Ask the Dust; and Wait Until Spring, Bandini simultaneously reveal and disguise their author. Born in 1909 to poor Italian American parents in Colorado, Fante ventured west in 1930 to become a writer. Eventually settling in Los Angeles' faded downtown area of Bunker Hill, Fante starved between menial Depression-era jobs while writing story after story about the world he knew-full of poverty, hatred, and the madness of love. His first stories were published by H. L. Mencken in the American Mercury, but Fante also made a career in Hollywood working with the likes of Orson Welles and Darryl F. Zanuck. By the time of his death, though, he was nearly forgotten. Fortunately, readers such as Charles Bukowski began to recognize that Ask the Dust stands alongside the best work of Nathanael West and Sherwood Anderson. This exacting and vivid biography will help secure Fante's place in the American literary pantheon.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 400
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: North Point Press
Published: 31 Dec 1998

ISBN 10: 0865475547
ISBN 13: 9780865475540

Media Reviews
Fante would have loved this book, unless of course people wind up reading it instead of his fiction, in which case he'd have decked somebody. Those lucky souls whom this sad, lusty biography sends to his novels have a revelation in store. Discovering Fante is like tasting garlic for the first time. --David Kipen, San Francisco Chronicle By bringing together [Fante's] life and work for the first time with such clarity of purpose, Cooper presents a remarkable gift to innumerable fans of Fante's work. Long live Arturo Bandini. --Phyllis Richardson, Los Angeles Times Book Review