Cathy Curtis's sympathetic yet clear-eyed portrait of Elizabeth Hardwick's brilliant mess of a life is a revelation. A southerner with literary ambitions who transplanted herself to Manhattan, Hardwick married the poet Robert Lowell, whose bipolar disorder led to recurrent institutionalizations that were often precipitated by affairs with other women. Against these odds, Hardwick forged a consequential career as a story writer, novelist, and peerless essayist and critic. A vivid and at times harrowing book, A Splendid Intelligence is, in the end, a triumphant biography.--William Souder, Los Angeles Times Book Prize-winning author of Mad at the World: A Life of John Steinbeck
Cathy Curtis's crisp, illuminating biography of Hardwick reveals her subject as one of a handful of brilliant women who shaped mid-twentieth-century American literature and feminism. The biography's title, A Splendid Intelligence, encapsulates Curtis's view of Hardwick as a writer whose fortitude, bold thinking, and tough lyricism earned her a permanent place in cultural history.--Carol Sklenicka, author of Alice Adams: Portrait of a Writer and Raymond Carver: A Writer's Life
Cathy Curtis has given us a stirring biography of Elizabeth Hardwick, who is still woefully underestimated as a humane Southern writer and unsparing New York intellectual, the author of a fictional masterpiece, Sleepless Nights, and some of the finest essays ever written about American literature. It's a thrill to read this splendidly intelligent book.--Edward Hirsch, author of Stranger by Night
Curtis treats Hardwick's work with respect and admiration... I finished this book with a strong sense of Hardwick's resolve and intelligence.--Heather Clark "New York Times Book Review"
A Splendid Intelligence is an admirable work that fills a glaring void in the 20th century American literary landscape... It's a necessary and welcome biography, raising larger questions about literary influence and biography's role in literary prestige.--Lauren LeBlanc "Los Angeles Times"
It's refreshing to read a history of Hardwick that lasts more than a few paragraphs and pictures her solo... The years chronicled in Curtis's book are, as they always will be, dominated by Lowell, but documented here is her persistence in the marriage, her teaching, her criticism, her book publications, her literary accomplishments.--Valerie Duff "Boston Globe"
Towards the end, Hardwick observed that 'Writing is so hard... It's the only time in your life when you have to think.' She kept at it, excelled and endured, and this book does that effort justice.--Mary Ann Gwinn "Minneapolis Star Tribune"
As a biographer, Curtis is sober, respectful, diligent... A Splendid Intelligence is the first biography of a writer who is mainly known among the other writers who revere her, serving as a solid resource and accessible introduction.--Jennifer Szalai "New York Times"
A Splendid Intelligence is admirably researched and supplies the reader with a thorough account of Hardwick's calendar life, complete with names, dates, places, publication summaries, and--most important--a remarkably well-organized portrait of the chaos that dogged the Lowell-Hardwick marriage.--Vivian Gornick "New Republic"
Curtis recounts in resonant detail Hardwick's demanding life in New York, Europe, and Maine, charting each phase in her passionately intellectual and artistic life, and adeptly lacing her involving and invaluable chronicle with exquisite passages from her subject's letters and published works, ensuring that Hardwick's etched crystal voice radiates in all its resplendent beauty, valor, and knowingness.-- "Booklist (starred review)"
Elizabeth Hardwick was a complex woman who disguised her rapier intelligence and acid wit under a ladylike Southern drawl. Born in Lexington, Kentucky, the eighth of eleven children, she somehow developed a bookish, elegant sensibility that would eventually bring her to New York City and into the bright, hot, competitive center of the literary world, where she became a writer of distilled and glistening essays and novels. Cathy Curtis has written a complex, nuanced, and deeply perceptive portrait of a woman who eschewed the de rigueur political positions of feminism that characterized her time but all the same spoke from a deeply independent-minded vision of women's place in the world. Too often viewed as an appendage to Lowell and a minor figure on the literary stage, Curtis has given Hardwick the stature, humanity, and writerly amplitude she deserves.--Daphne Merkin, author of The Fame Lunches