Here is the inimitable Henry Miller (1891-1980) speaking candidly about
himself and his robust fiction--Tropic of Cancer, Tropic of
Capricorn, The Air-Conditioned Nightmare. In this enticing collection
he argues convincingly for the things that have mattered in his full and
exhilarating life. He and his interviewers cover the range of his
engrossing works that stirred obscenity charges, as well as his life as
an expatriate, his loves and conquests, his goals, his beliefs, and his
probing insights into the culture that produced him and repulsed him.
These conversations serve as a retrospective visit with one of America's
most distinctively opinionated, most singularly identifiable, and most
invigorating authors.