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Butterfly In The Typewriter: The Short, Tragic Life Of John Kennedy Toole And The Remarkable Story Of A Confederacy Of Dunces (2012)

by Cory MacLauchlin(Favorite Author)
3.69 of 5 Votes: 5
ISBN
0306820404 (ISBN13: 9780306820403)
languge
English
publisher
Da Capo Press
review 1: This book was mind blowing for me because somehow I had the idea in my head that Ignatius J Reilly was basically a mirror of John Kennedy Toole and this was truly not the case. Ken Toole was smart, charismatic, fairly grounded and successful....in short he was nothing like Ignatius! This book gave a lot of background and explained the inspiration for the book and the many unforgettable characters. If anyone is not familiar with Toole, the abridged version goes like this: wrote novel, rejected, depression, suicide, book publication driven be bereaved mother, Pulitzer Prize. Toole's story is one of the great tragedies of American literature and we'll never know what might have been.
review 2: I had never heard of John Kennedy Toole the day that the cover of A Co
... morenfederacy of Dunces caught my eye on the Harvard Book Store bargain table. That cover was so different from everything else there that it was the first thing I picked up, and I had the feeling the book was going to be special. And, it turns out that I was correct. A Confederacy of Dunces is a brilliant novel, and it started my thirty-year fascination with its author, a man who committed suicide at age 31 in 1969, eleven years before his Pulitzer Prize winning novel was even published.But, largely because of how Toole’s mother solely controlled the documents pertaining to her son, destroying those that did not support the image she preferred, knowing what to believe about the author’s life has not been easy. Butterfly in the Typewriter, the new John Kennedy Toole biography by Cory MacLauchlin, goes a long way in separating the myth created by Thelma, Toole’s mother, from the reality of the man’s brief life. Toole is, of course, a New Orleans native, and the city was as important to him as anything else in his life ever would be. Despite working and studying in places as varied as New York City and rural Louisiana, the city was forever in his blood. Although it provided him with real-life representations of what would become the key characters of his literary masterpiece, living there with his parents into his thirties was also a constant reminder of his failures. And, finally, after a row with Thelma, John Kennedy Toole ended the last road trip of his life on a deserted road outside Biloxi, Mississippi by inhaling the exhaust fumes from his car until he was dead. Butterfly in the Typewriter follows Toole’s brief journey from birth; through the school years that culminated in degrees from Tulane and Columbia University; to his jobs as an English teacher; and, completing the cycle, back to living with – and financially supporting - his parents in their New Orleans home. Along the way, we meet his friends and colleagues, and learn much about his family, including its history of mental illness. Toole’s story is complicated by his mother’s unfortunate habit of editing it for her own purposes (and glory), but it would have been complicated enough even without her meddling. To Thelma’s everlasting credit, there is no doubt that, without her efforts, the world would never have heard of A Confederacy of Dunces. She even, with $100,000 of royalty money from the book, established the John Kennedy Toole scholarship at Tulane, a fund that, according to MacLauchlin, is worth more than $1 million today. Butterfly in the Typewriter is an evenhanded biography, one that tries to tell all sides of the story while minimizing speculation and rumor (or at least pointing them out as such). Sadly, though, it appears that we will never know the whole truth of John Kennedy Toole because all we have left is Thelma Toole’s edited version of who he was. We know that she destroyed his suicide note and other documents that would have certainly offered insights into her son’s mind. And, now that all existing documents have been studied, and most of those to whom Toole was closest have taken their secrets to the grave, Butterfly in the Typewriter may just be as good as it ever gets. less
Reviews (see all)
tans
I will link to my Library Journal review of the book once it is published.
adrija
If you read Confederacy of Dunces, read this book.
baiza123
A little wordy, but interesting story of his life
habababba
Difficult read, but interesting.
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