Novelists, poets, and playwrights live double lives. When they fall out
with each other they seem to do so with great passion. This highly
entertaining book looks at some of the most complex friendships and
enmities in literary history and examines the dramatic effects on
literature itself. Grudge matches covered here include Vladimir Nabokov
against Edmund Wilson; Norman Mailer, Truman Capote, Gore Vidal,
Virginia Wolfe, and John Updike against each other; Ernest Hemingway's
spectacular and very public falling-out with former friends Gertrude
Stein and Alice Toklas; Lillian Hellman against Mary McCarthy; plus many
more.
Richard Bradford is professor of English and a senior distinguished
research fellow at the University of Ulster.