"Tennessee Williams spent twenty years in St. Louis, from 1918 until 1938, but in Blue Song, Henry I. Schvey eloquently and convincingly shows how his time there significantly impacted the subject matter and themes of his work throughout his life. He does this through illuminating analyses of the lesser-known plays, stories, and poems he wrote while he was in St. Louis, and with fresh examinations of both obscure and more familiar later plays which demonstrate how his complex feelings about his St. Louis years pervaded them as well. Throughout, Schvey's careful research combines with the acuity of his critiques to produce a valuable contribution to both the biographical and critical record of one of America's leading twentieth-century literary figures."--Jackson R. Bryer, University of Maryland, co-editor of William Inge: Essays and Reminiscences on the Plays and the Man
"While 'Missouri' Williams would have never rolled off the tongue as slickly as 'Tennessee, ' Henry I. Schvey argues convincingly that the young Tom Williams's genius was nourished as much in St. Louis as it was in Clarksdale or Memphis. Williams's signatory 'fugitive kind, ' Schvey reminds us, are more the detritus of a Depression-era St. Louis than they are the antiheroes of a post-Reconstruction New South. Tracing the city's presence in and impact on Williams's early through late works, Blue Song: St. Louis in the Life and Work of Tennessee Williams is a much needed 'piece of the puzzle of Williams's art' and complicated life."--John S. Bak, Professor of American Studies, Université de Lorraine
"As much as the future playwright openly despised the polluted city where he felt trapped from the age of seven throughout his teens, there could have been no Tennessee Williams without St. Louis. Henry Schvey deftly conveys how pervasive the city's influence was, whether the plays are set there or elsewhere. The writing is fluid and the insights are often breathtaking."--Felicia Hardison Londré, University of Missouri-Kansas City, author of Modern American Drama: Playwriting in the 1940s