This valuable and informative book is a study of Percy's five novels in
the context of his southern and American literary sources and his tragic
personal history. Though Percy has emphasized mainly his European
existential influences, his highly allusive novels echo his tragic early
years in the South, as well as his ambivalent relationship with his
adoptive father William Alexander Percy and his awareness of such
writers as Twain, Hemingway, and Warren.
This perceptive study examines Percy's novels in the light of
psychoanalytic theory, philosophy, and literary analysis. The author
finds that Percy's fiction has been shaped as much by what Percy
rejected as by what he embraced.
This book is "admirable first of all for its good taste. It respects
Walker Percy's privacy. . . . It offers fair readings, generous
readings, and ultimately new and rewarding readings." --Lewis Lawson