Stanley Elkin

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Stanley Elkin

Born May 11, 1930
Brooklyn, New York
Died May 31, 1995
St. Louis, Missouri
Occupation Novelist, professor
Nationality American
Writing period 1950-1995

Stanley Elkin (May 11, 1930May 31, 1995) was an American novelist, short story writer, and essayist. His extravagant, satirical fiction revolves around American consumerism, popular culture, and male-female relationships.

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[edit] Biography

Elkin was born in Brooklyn, New York, and grew up in Chicago from age three onwards. He did both his undergraduate and graduate work at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, receiving a bachelor's degree in English in 1952 and a Ph.D. in 1961 for his dissertation on William Faulkner. (During this period he was drafted and served in the U.S. Army from 1955-57.) In 1953 Elkin married Joan Marion Jacobson. He was a member of the English faculty at Washington University in St. Louis from 1960 until his death, and battled multiple sclerosis for most of his adult life.

During his career, Elkin published ten novels, two volumes of novellas, two books of short stories, a collection of essays, and one (unproduced) screenplay. Elkin's work revolves about American pop culture, which it portrays in innumerable darkly comic variations. Characters take full precedence over plot. His language throughout is extravagant and exuberant, baroque and magnificently flowery, taking fantastic flight from his characters' endless patter. "He was like a jazz artist who would go off on riffs," said William Gass. The novels are at once both highly artistic and immensely entertaining, though at times their essential sadness becomes almost unbearable. In a review of George Mills, Ralph B. Sipper wrote, "Elkin's trademark is to tightrope his way from comedy to tragedy with hardly a slip." About the influence of ethnicity on his work he said he admired most "the writers who are stylists, Jewish or not. Bellow is a stylist, and he is Jewish. William Gass is a stylist, and he is not Jewish. What I go for in my work is language."

Elkin won the National Book Critics Circle Award on two occasions: for George Mills in 1982 and for Mrs. Ted Bliss, his last novel, in 1995. The MacGuffin was a finalist for the 1991 National Book Award for Fiction. However, although he enjoyed high critical praise, his books have never enjoyed popular success.

Elkin died May 31, 1995 of a heart attack. His manuscripts and correspondence are archived in Olin Library at Washington University in St. Louis.

He has a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame.

[edit] Works

[edit] Novels

  • Boswell: A Modern Comedy (1964)
  • A Bad Man (1967)
  • The Dick Gibson Show (1971)
  • The Franchiser (1976)
  • The Living End (1979)
  • George Mills (1982)
  • The Magic Kingdom (1985)
  • The Rabbi of Lud (1987)
  • The MacGuffin (1991)
  • Mrs. Ted Bliss (1995)

[edit] Story collections

  • Criers and Kibitzers, Kibitzers and Criers (1966)
  • Early Elkin (1985)

[edit] Novella collections

  • Searches and Seizures (1973) (U.K. title: Eligible Men (1974))
  • Van Gogh's Room at Arles (1993)

[edit] Other works

  • "A Prayer for Losers", from the Why Work Series (edited by Gordon Lish) (1966)
  • Stanley Elkin's Greatest Hits (anthology; Foreword by Robert Coover) (1980)
  • The Six-Year-Old Man (screenplay) (1987)
  • Pieces of Soap (collected essays) (1992)

[edit] Limited editions

  • The First George Mills (Part One of George Mills; 376 copies, all signed by Elkin and the illustrator, Jane E. Hughes) (1980)
  • Why I Live Where I Live (essay; 30 unnumbered copies) (1983)
  • The Coffee Room (radio play; 95 copies, all signed by Elkin and the illustrator, Michael McCurdy) (1987)

[edit] Audio

  • "A Poetics for Bullies", read by Jackson Beck, with comments by Elkin, in New Sounds in American Fiction, Program 10. (edited by Gordon Lish) (1969)

[edit] As editor

[edit] External links