Amazon.com Review
Playing on the title of his first novel,
What I'm Going to Do, I Think, Larry Woiwode's fresh, endearing memoir chronicles the years leading up to its publication in 1969. He views his early life from the vantage point of the bitterly cold winter of 1996 in North Dakota, where he resides with his wife and children, seamlessly interweaving his memories with an often comic account of the mishap-fraught installation of a new wood-burning furnace. Woiwode's supple, burnished prose teems with love for his family and with religious faith all the more moving for being quietly and unpretentiously expressed. His early struggles as an actor, poet, and fiction writer gain depth from this mature perspective, which also ensures that mentions of the literary celebrities who cross his path (John Updike, Truman Capote, and Robert Lowell, among others) never seem like mere name-dropping. Woiwode's affectionate portrait of Robert De Niro, a friend since the actor was 19 and the author 21, gives a marvelously vivid sense of De Niro's idiosyncratic personality. Even more revelatory is the detailed account of Woiwode's relationship with legendary
New Yorker editor William Maxwell, which shows a sensitive, challenging mentor helping a young writer find his voice. The writer frankly depicts hard times and bad moments, but his autobiography's fundamental emotion is joy.
--Wendy Smith
From Publishers Weekly
National Book Award and NBCC finalist (for his novel Beyond the Bedroom Wall) Woiwode tells of braving North Dakota's harshest winter on record (1996) as well as the New York literary world in this lovely but emotionally reserved memoir. Aiming to "write a memoir that gets beneath the self-consciousness of self," he offers a seemingly natural view of his mind at work, gliding from fact (the correct pronunciation of Woiwode is "Y-woodie") to observation (on his daughter's unerring sense of direction) to drama (the pitching of a carton of college Dickens texts into the furnace when firewood runs out). Snatches of dialogue with mentor William Maxwell offering writing advice and with friend Robert De Niro revealing the actor's worries about love run throughout the book, as do sonorous descriptions of the world around him, as when he describes a sunset "strip of orange under a boil of dark-blue clouds so huge their upper reaches bump at heaven." Yet, while the memoir (his first of a projected three) is centered on particular personal events--setting up a wood-burning furnace, launching oneself as a writer--the work lacks immediacy and intimacy. Even Woiwode's encounter with God, the strongest portion of the book, although obviously heartfelt, is elusive, even for a fellow believer. While packed with incident and reflection, this memoir is best read not for author epiphanies or a sense of place, but for its unhurried and deliberate movement of words. 3-city author tour; radio satellite tour. (May)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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