John Ford's classic films--such as Stagecoach, The Grapes of Wrath, How
Green Was My Valley, The Quiet Man, and The Searchers--have earned him
worldwide admiration as America's foremost filmmaker, a director whose
rich visual imagination conjures up indelible, deeply moving images of
our collective past.
Joseph McBride's Searching for John Ford, described as definitive by
both the New York Times and the Irish Times, surpasses all other
biographies of the filmmaker in its depth, originality, and insight.
Encompassing and illuminating Ford's myriad complexities and
contradictions, McBride traces the trajectory of Ford's life from his
beginnings as "Bull" Feeney, the nearsighted, football-playing son of
Irish immigrants in Portland, Maine, to his recognition, after a long,
controversial, and much-honored career, as America's national mythmaker.
Blending lively and penetrating analyses of Ford's films with an
impeccably documented narrative of the historical and psychological
contexts in which those films were created, McBride has at long last
given John Ford the biography his stature demands.