Tom Wolfe's Los Angeles (TV Movie 1977) Poster

(1977 TV Movie)

User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
NYTimes.
photosynthesis15 May 2018
Https://readingroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/03/21/the-man-in-full/
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Tom Wolf - where r u?
photosynthesis5 April 2007
Whatever happened to Tom Wolfe? He's the famous author of "Bonfire of The Vanities."

In 1984 and 1985 Wolfe wrote his first novel, The Bonfire of the Vanities, in serial form against a deadline of every two weeks for Rolling Stone magazine. It came out in book form in 1987. A story of the money-feverish 1980s in New York, "The Bonfire of the Vanities" was number one of the New York Times bestseller list for two months and remained on the list for more than a year, selling over 800,000 copies in hardcover. It also became the number-one bestselling paperback, with sales above two million.

In 1989 Wolfe outraged the literacy community with an essay in Harper's called "Stalking the Billion-footed Beast." In it he argued that the only hope for the future of the American novel was a Zolaesque naturalism in which the novelist becomes the reporter—as he had done in writing "The Bonfire of the Vanities," which was recognized as the essential novel of America in the 1980s.

In 1996 Wolfe wrote the novella "Ambush at Fort Bragg" as a two-part series for Rolling Stone. In 1997 it was published as a book in France and Spain and as an audiotape in the United States. An account of a network television magazine show's attempt to trap three soldiers at Fort Bragg into confessing to the murder of one of their comrades, it grew out of what had been intended as one theme in a novel Wolfe was working on at that time. The novel, "A Man in Full," was published in November 1998. The book's protagonists are a sixty-year-old Atlanta real estate developer whose empire has begun a grim slide toward bankruptcy and a twenty-three-year-old manual laborer who works in the freezer unit of a wholesale food warehouse in Alameda County, California, owned by the developer. Before the story ends, both have had to face the question of what is it that makes a man "a man in full" now, at the beginning of a new century and a new millennium.

"A Man in Full" headed the New York Times bestseller list for ten weeks and has sold nearly 1.4 million copies in hardcover. The book's tremendous commercial success, its enthusiastic welcome by reviewers, and Wolfe's appearance on the cover of Time magazine in his trademark white suit plus a white homburg and white kid gloves—along with his claim that his sort of detailed realism was the future of the American novel, if it was going to have one—provoked a furious reaction among other American novelists, notably John Updike, Norman Mailer, and John Irving.

In October 2000 Wolfe published "Hooking Up," a collection of fiction and non fiction concerning the turn of the new century, entitled "Hooking Up." It included "Ambush at Fort Bragg" and, for the first time since their original publication in the Herald-Tribune, his famous essays on William Shawn and The New Yorker, "Tiny Mummies!" and "Lost in the Whichy Thickets." His new novel "I Am Charlotte Simmons," is now available in paperback from Picador.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed