Synopsis
Stan Hart's life is the story of an American coming of age in the era between the Great Depression and the late '60s.
Born to a well-to-do Connecticut manufacturing family, Hart grew up in comfortable but unsophisticated circumstances. Afflicted with a severe stammer, Hart lived in speechless awe of his stern, heroic, tight-lipped and relentlessly cheerful father. He pitied his mother, once beautiful, who, stricken with a chronic disease, became an alcoholic.
Desperate for a role in life and buoyed by a constant flow of alcohol, Hart later blundered about town in New York and Europe, on the edge of cafe society, pursuing every girl who appeared willing. Despite marriage, he remained a loner. For a time, he found work that sustained him in the respectable Boston publishing world, where he embarked upon a compromising relationship with his best known author, the playwright, Lillian Hellman.
Hart's savage self assessment reveals a man at sea in a sexual wilderness and frank about his missed opportunities, failure, and confusions. Hart's story will touch anyone who has struggled to come to terms with the challenges life poses along the way regarding sexuality, family, marriage, work and the drive to find purpose in existence. Throughout, portions of the narrative have been fictionalized to protect the participants. However, the whole conveys an essential truth - the result is a rare form of autobiographical honesty.
Reviews
A former editor at Little, Brown, Hart lays bare the dark currents swirling beneath his privileged life. The writing here is plain, but Hart makes up for that with an unusual degree of candor and with some juicy publishing world gossip from yesteryear. Afflicted with a severe stammer from childhood, which he finally eliminated through psychoanalysis at age 32, Hart feared and venerated his aloof father, a decorated WWI veteran and wealthy Connecticut heating-vent manufacturer, who mockingly called him a "fumblefinger." Hart's mother, stricken with multiple sclerosis, slid into alcoholism and opiate addiction, and his parents' vitriolic fights were exacerbated by his father's philandering. To disprove his moniker, Hart affected bravado, dropping out of Wesleyan in 1950 to join the Air Force and having numerous sexual affairs, which he relates in graphic, sometimes tedious detail. At 24, not ready for marriage, he walked out on his pregnant girlfriend; the daughter born of their union died in infancy, in care of the state. Hart remained an "emotional escape artist," burying his feelings beneath workaholism, grandiosity and alcoholism, which ultimately caused him to lose his wife and two children. While at Little, Brown in 1966-67, Hart, then 36, had an affair with one of his famous authorsAplaywright Lillian Hellman, then in her 60s. His very unsentimental, almost brutal account of their dalliance caps this tell-all, which breaks off in 1968. Though Hart appears to intend his memoir to be a cautionary tale of alcoholism, he never really comes to terms with his inner demons in these hectic pages. Perhaps it's that lack of resolutionAso different from memoirs written from a stance of inner peaceAthat makes this book as gripping as it is. Photos not seen by PW. (July)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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