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Tiny Terror

Tiny Terror

Tiny Terror
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Tiny Terror Hardback - 2011 - 1st Edition

by Schultz, William Todd,

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Details

  • Title Tiny Terror
  • Author Schultz, William Todd,
  • Binding Hardback
  • Edition number 1st
  • Edition 1
  • Condition New
  • Pages 208
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Oxford University Press, Qd6
  • Publication date 2011-04-29
  • Features Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index, Table of Contents
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 12467691
  • ISBN 9780199752041 / 0199752044
  • Weight 0.6 lbs (0.27 kg)
  • Dimensions 7.1 x 5.1 x 0.9 in (18.03 x 12.95 x 2.29 cm)
  • Themes
    • Aspects (Academic): Psychological
  • Category Psychology
  • Library of Congress subjects Authors, American - 20th century, Psychoanalysis and literature - United States
  • Library of Congress Catalogue Number 2010037233
  • Dewey Decimal Code B
  • Quantity available 5

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Reader reviews for Tiny Terror

From the publisher

Truman Capote was one of the most gifted and flamboyant writers of his generation, renowned for such books as Other Voices, Other Rooms, Breakfast at Tiffany's, and his masterpiece, the nonfiction novel In Cold Blood . What has received comparatively little attention, however, is Capote's last, unfinished book, Answered Prayers, a merciless skewering of cafe society and the high-class women Capote called his "swans." When excerpts appeared he was immediately blacklisted, ruined socially, labeled a pariah. Capote recoiled--disgraced, depressed, and all but friendless. In Tiny Terror, a new volume in Oxford's Inner Lives series, William Todd Schultz sheds light on the life and works of Capote and answers the perplexing mystery--why did Capote write a book that would destroy him? Drawing on an arsenal of psychological techniques, Schultz illuminates Capote's early years in the South--a time that Capote himself described as a "snake's nest of No's"--no parents to speak of, no friends but books, no hope, no future. Out of this dark childhood emerged Capote's prominent dual life-scripts: neurotic Capote, anxious, vulnerable, hypersensitive, expecting to be hurt; and Capote the disagreeable destroyer, emotionally bulletproof, nasty, and bent on revenge. Schultz shows how Capote would strike out when he felt hurt or taken for granted, engaging in caustic feuds with Gore Vidal, Tennessee Williams, and many other writers. And Schultz reveals how this tendency fed into Answered Prayers, an exceedingly corrosive and thinly disguised roman a clef that trashed his high-society friends. What emerges by the end of this book is a cogent, immensely insightful portrait of an artist on the edge, brilliantly but self-destructively biting the jet-set hands that fed him. Anyone interested in the inner life of one of America's most fascinating literary personalities will find this book a revelation.

Media reviews

Citations

  • Choice, 11/01/2011, Page 0
  • Kirkus Reviews, 03/15/2011, Page 0
  • Library Journal, 04/15/2011, Page 94

About the author

William Todd Schultz, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at Pacific University. Over the past two decades he's written numerous psychobiographical articles and book chapters, on Ludwig Wittgenstein, Diane Arbus, Sylvia Plath, Oscar Wilde, Roald Dahl, James Agee, and Jack Kerouac, among others. He is editor of the Handbook of Psychobiography, published by Oxford University Press in 2005.
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