Best books biography 2013 gmc
Best Books of Biography!
As long-time Stevereads readers may recall, I like biography just a bit more than I like any other kind of writing. Something about the way it combines the sweep of history and the narrative of fiction tends to work on me even when the specific volume in question is less than stellar. And provided me with some truly stellar volumes! In fact, so strong was the field this time around that my enjoyment of these ten best examples was undimmed by three factors that should have doomed it: 1) some of these biographies are of individuals I loathe and despise, 2) some of these biographies are in sub-categories (like acting or, gawd help us, sports) that have typically held no interest for me, and most of all, 3) some of these biographies are part of two-volume sets and so, youd think, would have struck me as incomplete. But the energy and sheer literary quality of these ten titles swept away such petty objections leaving me with plenty of books to enjoy, and to recommend strongly:
Coolidge by Amity Shlaes (Harper) A perfect case in point: Shlaes lovingly painstaking biography of this walking slab of gluten-free tofu should have been as boring as every previous biography of Americas third-least-loved president, but such is Shlaes sheer gusto that its sufficient to transform even this wretched Massachusetts carpetbagger (referred to rather pointedly by a journalist in his own time as tedium in a top hat) into a figure of fascination, if not sympathy. This was a weak year for presidential biographies (the only other really prominent example being hagiography of the most revolting stripe), but Shlaes book would have stood out even in a strong year.
9. Queen Anne: The Politics of Passion by Anne Somerset (Knopf) was also something of a weak year for royal biographies (Jane Ridleys The Heir Apparent being one of the only other possible contenders for a Stevereads list and failing only because it couldnt beat out its own predecessors), and at first glance Queen Anne reflexively despised as weak and easily bullied would seem an unlikely candidate for the distinction. But Anne Somerset is an old pro at this, and her book is a masterpiece. You can read my full review here.
8. The Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams by Ben Bradlee Jr. (Little, Brown) This big book represents another hurdle, since the last baseball book I loved was Leigh Montvilles Babe Ruth biography The Big Bam. Montville also once wrote a biography of the Splendid Splinter himself, Ted Williams, and in this lovingly-crafted doorstop about Williams from Ben Bradlee, jr., that earlier work is surpassed so handily it seems effortless. Bradlees book magnificently captures the famously multi-faceted (a euphemism for mostly horrible but we really wish it were otherwise) personality of the man many fans rank as the best ever to play the game. The writing here shifts from powerfully acerbic to openly sentimental with such brawn and confidence (as befits a writer who polished his chops in Boston) with such confidence that the thing could have been about Bill Buckner and Id have kept reading.
7. Citizen Emperor: Napoleon in Power byPhillip Dwyer (Yale University Press) What the mighty Book Barn in Niantic, Connecticut immortally refers to as The Pestiferous Little Corsican leads off a little trio of superb Napoleonic-era biographies that came out in This first one is Dwyers concluding volume to the big biography of the little tyrant he began in with Napoleon: The Path to Power, and the sequel is an even better piece of popular scholarship, detailing Bonapartes time in power. You can read my full review here.
6. Nelson: The Sword of Albion by John Sugden (Henry Holt) Like Dwyer, Sugden in came out with his concluding volume in a two-volume biography, this one of Horatio Nelson, whose face-stepping rise to power Sugden chronicled in s Nelson: A Dream of Glory, and this book, too, is not only a masterpiece on its own merits but also forms, with its preceding volume, the definitive work on its pudgy, egomaniacal subject. The Dwyer Napoleon and the Sugden Nelson will stand for a century as scholarly shorthand for the indispensable works on their respective subjects. You can read my full review here.
5. Wellington: The Path to Victory, by Rory Muir (Yale University Press) Unlike Dwyer and Sugdens books, Muirs fat masterpiece is the beginning of a set, not the conclusion this is Wellington the soldier, not Wellington the statesman. And one of the many brilliances of Muirs book is to remind readers that both those Wellingtons were also always Wellington the politician; the over-arching effect of this great book is to make this figure in many ways the most complex of his era even more complex, and thats a mighty thing for a book to achieve. You can read my full review here.
4. Bach: Music in the Castle of Heaven by Charles Eliot Gardiner (Knopf) Gardiners long-awaited work on J.S. Bach turned out to be even better than Id been hoping, a truly heartfelt monument to one mans lifetime involvement with one of the greatest musicians of all time. Given Gardiners own musical talents, its not surprising its in fact a source of great joy that this book is so suffused with musicology, but I was amazed at how smoothly even the most technical deconstructions are worked into the flow of the narrative. You can read my full review here.
3. Jonathan Swift: His Life and His World by Leo Damrosch (Yale University Press) Damroschs book is a perfect example of a phenomenon I encounter quite often in my reading: the sidereal drift of estimation. I read a great many of my books in at least two stages: bound galley advance copies and finished hardcover copies, usually separated by several months. And in that time, while Im reading other stuff, very often my initial estimation of those already-read books will be shifting and settling down in the cargo holds of my book-memory. I form an initial impression immediately (youre shocked, I know), but some books fight with those impressions, nagging me either to like them more or to dislike them more. There is no accounting for the sidereal drift of estimation (a book is a book! it doesnt change), and theres no predicting it (two of the works on my Best Fiction list this year, for example, started out on my Worst Fiction list!), but I certainly felt it in the case of this fantastic biography of Dean Swift, which first struck me as programmatic and then revealed itself to me as far more subtle and intelligent, in fact a great work on this great writer (the only writer-biography on our list this year). You can read my full review here.
2. Barbara Stanwyck, Steel-True: by Victoria Wilson (Simon & Schuster) Another perfect case-in-point of the unlikely nature of some of my top Biography picks this year! If youd told me last year (when Id only heard the vaguest rumblings about this book) that Id be getting a page biography of actress Barbara Stanwyck that doesnt even reach the period of her greatest artistic achievements, Id have said there was no way I would even read it, let alone love it, but Victoria Wilson has overruled all that and written a book that will stand as a masterpiece even if its concluding volume never gets written. The sheer breadth of her research is staggering - there seems to be no tiny source or detail about Stanwycks rise to fame that shes overlooked but by far my favorite part of this great book is Stanwyck herself: whenever Wilson quotes her, this incredibly smart, opinionated, and altogether wonderful voice enters the narrative and gives it a jolt. You most certainly dont need to have any prior interest in Stanwyck or the great and savage Golden Age of the American studio system to love this book Wilson and Stanwyck herself will keep you reading anyway.
1. All the Glittering Prizes by John Taliaferro (Simon & Schuster) How nonplussed gentle, chirping John Hay himself would have been if hed held in his hands this sumptuous and utterly wonderful treatment of his life! Here is his long life in politics, starting out as one of Abraham Lincolns many surrogate sons and coming to know four other US presidents quite well and not only see a new international era being born but personally assist with the delivery. Here we have the social life so amusingly prosecuted. Here we have the long and epoch-defining diplomatic work, and the friendships with all the good and great names of his day (especially with the cerebral and acid-tongued Henry Adams). And ultimately here we have the best biography of ! You can read my full review here.