Synopses & Reviews
A touching look into the heart and family of one of America's greatest poets.
As a literary portrait of a father and son, little can match the eloquence and honesty of this collection of letters, written between the years 1944 and 1976. The illuminating correspondence between Allen Ginsberg and his father, Louis, begins when Allen is a precocious, rebellious college student and charts his ascension as a revolutionary icon in poetry. Their letters are filled with affection, respect, and a healthy dose of argumentative zeal-they debate every major political and artistic issue that faced America in over three decades of extraordinary change.
Their correspondence also reveals the defining moments that shaped Allen's art-his experimentation with LSD, his various love affairs and obsessions, his travels around the globe. We see, from this unique perspective, the crucial process of a poet's widening experience of the world, and how these experiences are translated into his art.
Family Business is not only a personal glimpse into one of our great poets, but also a very moving story of a relationship between a father and a son set against the turbulent world of postwar America.
Review
"Anyone interested in Ginsberg, the beats, American poetry or the '60s should not miss this ferociously tender and comical collection.' --
Publishers Weekly, starred
"An eloquent, affecting collection that offers lessons in poetry, in love, and in family" --Kirkus Reviews, starred
"An absorbing and often moving record of an intense relationship." --The New York Times Book Review
"Important reading for us all." --San Francisco Chronicle
About the Author
Michael Schumacher wrote
Dharma Lion, the acclaimed biography of Allen Ginsberg, and is also the author of the biographies of Eric Clapton, Phil Ochs, and Francis Ford Coppola. He began researching
Family Business in 1994, when Ginsberg first agreed to the project.