Mentored by F. Scott Fitzgerald and Sinclair Lewis and published under
the renowned Scribner editor Maxwell Perkins, Thomas Boyd attained only
modest success as a novelist and biographer. He is known most widely for
his World War I novel Through the Wheat, which critics, praising its
realistic depiction of war and battle, compared to the Red Badge of
Courage. How does a writer like Boyd, with his prominent literary
friends, political ideals, professional aspirations, complicated
personal life, and early death, fall so easily into obscurity? In this
first full biography of Thomas Boyd, Brian Bruce explores the events of
Boyd's life and rescues him from the realm of insignificance. The 1920s
were a magical and very attractive time for critics and historians of
American literature. Hollywood and the radio would soon end the careers
enjoyed by many writers, like Boyd, and the nature of the book market
would change forever in ways that mark the novel's descent from a
privileged position of cultural importance or influence. Richly based on
correspondence, this book not only illuminates a forgotten writer, but
also captures the publishing world at a mercurial peak.