Jean Nathan, author of The Secret Life of the Lonely Doll, will be reading from and signing her book Thursday evening at Vroman's in Pasadena. The book has gotten gobs of positive attention, and it's an evening worth checking out.
Because Wright is far from, say, Henry James, I was at first skeptical that her life warranted intense biographical scrutiny. Nathan, however, convinced me. Her strongest argument is emotional -- the appeal ''the Lonely Doll'' had for her as a child when her family ''abandoned'' her mentally retarded brother in an institution. ''Every goodbye felt like a rerun of the first one,'' Nathan writes about visiting him. ''When he didn't cry, I knew he was trying not to as hard as I was. . . . When he did cry, it was ghastly and we all cried, all the way home.'' She also tells how this trauma affected her own decision to have children.
Where Wright's art was accidental and campy, Nathan's self-reflection, which emerges in her prologue and epilogue, seems well considered and even moving. This biography left me wanting to know more -- about Jean Nathan.
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