Francine Prose’s New Memoir 1974 Reviewed in the Los Angeles Times
1974, a new memoir by Distinguished Writer in Residence Francine Prose, was reviewed in the Los Angeles Times. The memoir reflects on the shift of America’s identity during that historical year and the events that defined it, such as the Vietnam war, drugs, women’s liberation, and the Patty Hearst kidnapping. It also examines Prose’s own relationship with Anthony Russo, who had been indicted and tried for working with Daniel Ellsberg to leak the Pentagon papers. “Throughout 1974, Prose skillfully interweaves the political and the personal elements of this watershed time. Many lesser writers have tried this and failed,” writes Meredith Maran for the Los Angeles Times. “Of the many books I’ve read (and written) on the topic—I lived in parallel to Prose’s 1960s–1970s life—none has matched Prose’s use of the personal to deepen the political and vice versa.” Maran continues, “In this, her first memoir, Prose succeeds where many before her have failed, enlivening—without demonizing or idealizing—the valiant, creative, idealistic movement that almost brought capitalism down.”
Post Date: 06-25-2024
Post Date: 06-25-2024