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Chapter 10: Late Twentieth Century and Postmodernism
Tom Wolfe
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Source: Boston
Univ
The kandy-kolored tangerine-flake streamline baby. NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1965. E169.1 .W685The pump house gang. NY: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1968. E169.02 .W6
The electric kool-aid acid test. NY: Bantam Books 1969, 1968. HV5825 .W56
Radical chic & Mau-Mauing the flak catchers. NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1970. E185.615 .W63
The new journalism. with an anthology edited byTom Wolfe and E. W. Johnson. NY: Harper & Row 1973. PN4867 .W6
The painted word. NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1975. ND195 W64
Mauve gloves & madmen, clutter & vine, and other stories, sketches, and essays. NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1976. PS3573 .O526 M3
The right stuff. NY: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1979. TL789.8.U5 W64
In our time. NY: Farrar, Straus Giroux, 1980. E169.12 .W62
From Bauhaus to our house. NY: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1981. NA712 W6
The purple decades: a reader. NY: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1982. PS3573.O526 P8
The bonfire of the vanities. NY: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1987. PS3573 .O526 B6
A man in full: a novel. NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998. PS3573 .O526 M26
Hooking up. NY: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2000. PS3573 .O526 H66
I Am Charlotte Simmons. NY: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2004.
Selected Bibliography 1980-Present
Bone, Martyn. "Placing the Postsouthern 'International City': Atlanta in Tom Wolfe's A Man in Full." in Jones, Suzanne W. and Sharon Monteith. eds. South to a New Place: Region, Literature, Culture. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State UP, 2002.
Margolies, Edward J. New York and the Literary Imagination: The City in Twentieth Century Fiction and Drama. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2008.
McEneaney, Kevin T. Tom Wolfe's America: Heroes, Pranksters, and Fools. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2009.
McKeen, William. Tom Wolfe. NY: Twayne, 1995. PS3573 .O526 Z78
McNamara, Carol. "Men and Money in Tom Wolfe's America," in Henderson, Christine D. ed. Seers and Judges: American Literature as Political Philosophy. Lanham, MD: Lexington, 2002.
McNamara, Carol. "Men and Money in Tom Wolfe's America," in Henderson, Christine D. ed. Seers and Judges: American Literature as Political Philosophy. Lanham, MD: Lexington, 2002.
Salamon, Julie. The devil's candy: The Bonfire of the vanities goes to Hollywood. NY: Dell Publishing, 1992. PN1997 .B67963 S26
Scura, Dorothy. ed. Conversations with Tom Wolfe. Jackson: UP of Mississippi, 1990.
Shomette, Doug. ed. The Critical Response to Tom Wolfe. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1992.
Weingarten, Marc. The Gang That Wouldn't Write Straight: Wolfe, Thompson,
Didion, Capote, and the New Journalism Revolution. Crown, 2005.
Tom Wolfe, the consummate New Yorker, found his subject and voice in California
By MARC WEINGARTEN
MAY 16, 2018 | 12:15 PM
Tom Wolfe, the consummate New Yorker, found his subject and voice in California
Although he was a Depression-era son of the South, Tom Wolfe was a
consummate New Yorker. He lived there his entire adult life, and could
often be seen walking on the Upper East Side in ice cream suits, an
occasional gilt-tipped walking cane glinting in the sun. He was the
city's most recognizable flaneur.
Wolfe, who died this week at 88, was an atypical New Yorker in one
important respect: He loved California. Or rather, he was enamored of
the energies to be found here during the post-war era and the cultural
movements that were upending the "statusphere" that was Wolfe's idee
fixe for his entire career.
When I was spending time in the early aughts with Wolfe for a book that
I wrote on New Journalism, he had fond reminiscences about his
California sojourns, including a few somewhat discomfiting nights with
his friend Hunter S. Thompson. Wolfe embraced the dynamism and creative
spirit of the region, and still felt its effects decades after he'd
done his seminal reportage from the state.
As a journalist in the early 1960s, Wolfe's profile subjects were West
Coast figures: music producer Phil Spector, exotic dancer Carol Doda,
"The Pump House Gang" surfers of La Jolla. Even "The Right Stuff," his
1979 book about the Mercury space program, was largely centered on
Edwards Air Force Base in Kern County. New York had its Astors and
Rockefellers, but Wolfe instinctively knew that California was emerging
as the breeding ground for the second half of the 20th century. In his
articles and books, Wolfe explained California to the rest of us. He
was the first significant New York writer to take the state seriously.
Wolfe took the measure of New York as a young reporter at the New York
Herald Tribune and realized that everything novel he observed there was
just a facsimile of the real changes taking place on the West Coast.
While covering the 1963 New York Auto Show for the newspaper, Wolfe
gravitated to the tricked-out, pinstriped custom cars created by L.A.
natives Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, Dale Alexander and George Barris. He
compared Roth's custom cars to the enigmatic statues of Easter Island:
"Suddenly you come upon the astonishing objects, and then you have to
figure out how they got there and why they're there." Wolfe sold
Esquire on the idea of a much larger article, and flew to Los Angeles
to observe "Kustom Kulture" firsthand. It became the anchor piece for
his essay collection, "The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline
Baby."
In L.A., Wolfe had stumbled onto a new modality of American life.
In L.A., Wolfe had stumbled onto a new modality of American life, a
revved-up culture that was fed by post-war prosperity and a ritualized
formalism that wasn't beholden to the past — in short, the anti-New
York. As Wolfe drove around Los Angeles, he was taken in by the city's
architecture, "shaped not like rectangles but like trapezoids, from the
way the roofs slant up from the back and plate-glass fronts slant out
as if they're going to pitch forward on the sidewalk and throw up."
This was meant as a compliment. Wolfe saw the future in L.A.; to the
largely right-wing, East Coast readership of the Herald Tribune,
Wolfe's reporting was heresy.
Even Wolfe's technicolor prose style was shaped by his visits to L.A.
in the 1960s. "When I started writing in what was known as my style, I
was trying to capture the newness and excitement of the West Coast,"
Wolfe told me in 2004.
Less than a year after Wolfe introduced custom cars to a national
audience, he was anonymously sent a cache of letters by Ken Kesey. The
author of "One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest," Kesey had jumped bail on a
drug charge and was living in exile in Mexico. Down the rabbit hole
went Wolfe into Kesey's communal experiment with his followers the
Merry Pranksters, spending weeks at the group's La Honda compound in
San Mateo.
What emerged was "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test," which is both the
definitive report on the San Francisco counterculture and a cherished
literary artifact of the era. The book reads at times like an acid
trip, as Wolfe introduced his daring prose style that carried echoes of
Burroughs and Kerouac: "The sweet wheatfields and dairy lands of
America would be sailing by beauty rural green and curving, and Sandy
is watching the serene beauty of it … and then he happens to look into
the big rear-view mirror outside the bus and — the fields are — in
flames ::::::: curve and curdle straight up in hideous orange flames."
As a satirist, Wolfe could be merciless. But that wasn't the case with
his dispatches from California. Wolfe's tenderness and affection for
the state's endlessly renewable culture was palpable, both in
conversation and in his work. In Los Angeles and other points west,
Wolfe the social critic turned into an advocate.
MLA Style Citation of this Web Page
Reuben, Paul P. "Chapter 10: Tom Wolfe." PAL: Perspectives in American Literature- A Research and Reference Guide. URL: http://www.paulreuben.website/pal/chap10/wolfe_tom.html (provide page date or date of your login).| Top |