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Edward Abbey: A Life
 
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Edward Abbey: A Life [Paperback]

James M. Cahalan (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 1, 2003
“The best biography ever about Ed. Cahalan’s meticulous research and thoughtful interviews have made this book the authoritative source for Abbey scholars and fans alike.” —Doug Peacock, author, environmentalist activist and explorer, and the inspiration for Hayduke in The Monkey Wrench Gang

He was a hero to environmentalists and the patron saint of monkeywrenchers, a man in love with desert solitude. A supposed misogynist, ornery and contentious, he nevertheless counted women among his closest friends and admirers. He attracted a cult following, but he was often uncomfortable with it. He was a writer who wandered far from Home without really starting out there. James Cahalan has written a definitive biography of a contemporary literary icon whose life was a web of contradictions. Edward Abbey: A Life sets the record straight on "Cactus Ed," giving readers a fuller, more human Abbey than most have ever known. It separates fact from fiction, showing that much of the myth surrounding Abbey—such as his birth in Home, Pennsylvania, and later residence in Oracle, Arizona—was self-created and self-perpetuated. It also shows that Abbey cultivated a persona both in his books and as a public speaker that contradicted his true nature: publicly racy and sardonic, he was privately reserved and somber. Cahalan studied all of Abbey's works and private papers and interviewed many people who knew him—including the models for characters in The Brave Cowboy and The Monkey Wrench Gang—to create the most complete picture to date of the writer's life. He examines Abbey's childhood roots in the East and his love affair with the West, his personal relationships and tempestuous marriages, and his myriad jobs in continually shifting locations—including sixteen national parks and forests. He also explores Abbey's writing process, his broad intellectual interests, and the philosophical roots of his politics. For Abbey fans who assume that his "honest novel," The Fool's Progress, was factual or that his public statements were entirely off the cuff, Cahalan's evenhanded treatment will be an eye-opener. More than a biography, Edward Abbey: A Life is a corrective that shows that he was neither simply a countercultural cowboy hero nor an unprincipled troublemaker, but instead a complex and multifaceted person whose legacy has only begun to be appreciated. The book contains 30 photographs, capturing scenes ranging from Abbey's childhood to his burial site.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

With a subject as mythic as Cactus Ed Abbey (The Fool's Progress; The Monkey Wrench Gang), separating fact from fiction requires the skills of a researcher like Cahalan (Double Visions: Women and Men in Modern and Contemporary Irish Fiction) particularly because Abbey promoted much of the fiction himself. Affectionate but not besotted with his subject, Cahalan presents Abbey's strengths and shortcomings in equal light and without judgment, in the end clearing up many misunderstandings. For example, while Abbey was a promiscuous womanizer who married five times and had many affairs during all but his last marriage, his reputation, particularly among feminists, as a misogynist is, according to Cahalan, unfounded. Self-indulgent in the extreme and defiantly immature (he largely neglected his two sons by his second wife), Abbey admitted that he loved to be in love. From age 17, when he left his home in Indiana, Pa., on his first cross-country hitchhike, until his death at 62, Abbey was a lustful wanderer. In particular he explored the Southwest, which claimed his heart and impelled his most passionate environmental activism. Although he never met Abbey, Cahalan became fascinated by the writer when he received an appointment to teach English at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, in Abbey's hometown. Cahalan conducted interviews with more than 100 people who knew the writer, and immersed himself in Abbey's published and unpublished work, including personal letters and journals. Indeed, the bibliography alone the most comprehensive one on Abbey to date is reason enough to buy this beautifully rendered, sensitive and revealing work. The Abbey Cahalan presents complex, contradictory and passionate in his convictions fully deserves his larger-than-life status. 30 photos. (Nov. 1)Forecast: With blurbs from Robert Redford and Larry McMurtry, this should be popular with environmentalists and lovers of the American West.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Library Journal

Edward Abbey (1927-89) has long been a hero to the American environmental movement, and his nature writing (e.g., Desert Solitaire) and best novels (The Monkey Wrench Gang) are pioneering works. But as his biographer points out, the man himself was a complex individual who had a personality and lifestyle different from the persona in his books and articles. Cahalan successfully disproves some of the charges of racism and sexism leveled against Abbey while also showing that the redneck image of "Cactus Ed" he cultivated was really a fiction that he hid behind. Cahalan utilizes resources from library collections, but he also relies on almost 100 interviews with Abbey's family, friends, and colleagues. Though the author repeats his main points throughout the text, his book offers both depth and detail, easily surpassing James Bishop's Epitaph for a Desert Anarchist (LJ 6/1/94). Included is a valuable chronological bibliography of all of Abbey's writings. Recommended for academic and larger public libraries. (Index not seen.) Morris Hounion, New York City Technical Coll. Lib., Brooklyn
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 357 pages
  • Publisher: University of Arizona Press (April 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0816522677
  • ISBN-13: 978-0816522675
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.1 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #200,910 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
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 (9)
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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41 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Ed behind the Cactus., October 21, 2001
By 
This review is from: Edward Abbey: A Life (Hardcover)
Edward Abbey (1927-1989) had a big impact on me through his book, DESERT SOLITAIRE. Although our paths never crossed, we shared the same Arizona desert. He taught at the University of Arizona while I was a college student there, and for awhile we even lived in the same Tucson canyon. In James Cahalan's new biography, "cult followers of 'Cactus Ed,' on the one hand, will encounter in these pages another, different, more private Abbey. On the other hand, readers and teachers who have decided from some fleeting snapshot that Abbey disliked other races and women, for example, and do not want to read or teach his books, can read more about the Abbey who edited a bilingual English-Spanish newspaper and spoke at a Navajo rally, and the Abbey who so helpfully reviewed, advised, and befriended several women writers" (p. xii), including Arizona activist Katie Lee, Terry Tempest Williams, Ann Zwinger (p. xii), and Annie Dillard (p. 137).

Cahalan reveals that Abbey's books are autobiographical to an extent, and that his subject went to great lengths to perpetuate the persona of "Cactus Ed." For instance, Abbey was not born in Home, as he claimed, nor did he ever live in Oracle (pp. xi, 3). Based on his careful research and more than 100 interviews with people who knew Abbey, including Abbey's widow, Clarke Cartwright-Abbey, his siblings, and friends such as Dave Foreman, Wendell Berry, Gary Snyder, and Leslie Marmon Silko, Cahalan succeeds in bringing his subject to life in these pages. Abbey's fascinating life reads like fiction. Abbey was "an independent, rebellious, free spirit" even from an early age (p. 20). He was a "loner" in high school, and a "kind of hippie of his day" (p. 21), who hitchhiked West between his junior and senior years in high school (p. 28). "It was wanderlust, pure and simple" (p. 31), Abbey said. He became a Westerner at age 17, obsessed, "sense and mind, by desert thoughts, canyon thoughts" (p. 63) for the rest of his life. After graduating from high school in 1945, he joined the army (p. 33) before later becoming an anti-war activist (p. 99).

"No home, no income, no job" (p. 80) was a familiar theme in Abbey's life. Cahalan follows Abbey, "fueled by separation, lust, and alcohol" (p. 273), through his jobs as bartender, caseworker, laborer, teacher, technical writer, and ranger, from Appalachia, Alaska, Albuquerque, Cabeza Prieta, Taos, Death Valley, Glen Canyon, the Grand Canyon, Half Moon Bay, Moab to Tucson. Along his path from free-spirited loner to "postmodern, anarchist cowboy" (p. 225), Abbey marries five times and fathers five children before his March 14, 1989 death. Cahalan triumphs in revealing that Abbey lived in a "tortured inner world" amidst a "beautiful outerworld" (p. 91).

Abbey would probaby have "no comment" about Cahalan's well-researched, insightful biography. "Death is not tragic," he would remind us. Rather, existing "without fully participating in life--that is the deepest personal tragedy" (p. 208). Although this is not an authorized biography, it is the best biographical resource we have of Ed Abbey to date.

G. Merritt

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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Many Sides of Ed Abbey, October 23, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Edward Abbey: A Life (Hardcover)
James Cahalan's _Edward Abbey: A Life_ presents the most complete account of the life and times of this superb twentieth-century American writer and radical environmentalist. Cahalan reveals the complex nature of Abbey, from his roving youth in Appalachia to his turbulent adult relationships and finally to his illegal burial in the desert. This biography does not over-romanticize Abbey's life (the way Bishop's _Epitaph for a Desert Anarchist_ tends to do), but tells the true story of his life the way it was, utilizing interviews with a variety of sources who knew Abbey through the years and who surely knew him well. Cahalan introduces us to many of the people Abbey would use as the models for the characters in his novels. And his study also brings us closer to the real Ed Abbey while providing a corrective for those critics who would find him racist and misogynist. For the Abbey fan, _Edward Abbey: A Life_ is irreplaceable and provides the most extensive bibliography of Abbey's writings known. And for those who are just getting to know Abbey, this biography will get you hooked on this unforgettable American author and protector of wilderness. Either way, this book is a must.
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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Portrait of an enigma, December 28, 2001
By 
Pamela Moser (Castle Rock, CO USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Edward Abbey: A Life (Hardcover)
Any life as filled with controversy, contradiction and conflict as Ed Abbey's cannot be summed up in any one book. That is why Jim Cahalan's book is a valuable addition to any library that assumes to describe this complicated character. No other book about Abbey has as much detail, fact and non-creative non-fiction as Cahalan's. Abbey intended to be an enigma, making the task of uncovering the real person even more daunting. Cahalan has shown the perseverance of a private investigator in uncovering as much reality as anyone knows about Ed Abbey. His organizational skills have given us a wonderful view of Abbey's work, life and philosophy.
This book is highly recommended for anyone who desires to have as complete a picture as possible of the 20th century's most important environmental anarchist, Edward Abbey.
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