Tag Archives: settling scores in fiction
Lionel and Henry: In Fact and Fiction
There is just one case I know of where two brilliant young writers published dueling short stories about each other, in which each is the protagonist and his best friend the antagonist. Who were the writers who would do such … Continue reading →
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Tagged anti-communist, Authenticity, avoiding political extremes, betraying friendship; literary reputation, careerism, Columbia University’s class of 1925, communist activist, denying one’s identity, dueling short stories, emotional wholeness, erasing one's Jewish identity, Eric Voegelin Society, female malice, fulfilling youthful promise, imaginary authenticity, imaginary clandestine affair, Jewish identity, KGB files, life in disguise, Lionel Trilling, literary rivalry, lost innocence, lost youth, male friends, masked life, novel of ideas, political conversion, projecting one’s repressed identity, rabbinical student, religious conversion, roman a clef, seminary student, settling scores in fiction, social rank, Soviet agent, suppressed nostalgia, the just mean, the Left and the Right, the male mind, trial of the century; communist party, Whitttaker Chambers; Alger Hiss, womanly dignity, young writers
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