Only a poet, artist, translator, and classicist could have written this totally engaging account of the many-sided Max Jacob. We meet a host of artists we have known about elsewhere, and here they come vividly to life, and some to death; poets we might have thought we knew well, we know again. Max Jacob deserves these thirty years of impassioned thinking and superbly delicate, forceful writing. As poetry surely dwelt in him, poetry dwells no less in Rosanna Warren.--Mary Ann Caws, author of Creative Gatherings
Max Jacob led a life of allegory, as Keats would have called it. All the glory and barbarism of the twentieth century are summed up in his fortune and fate. Rosanna Warren has brought a poet's eloquence and a historian's doggedness to bear in this heartbreaking tale. Her book's humanity is commensurate with her hero's. She has given us a masterpiece of life writing.--Benjamin Taylor, author of Here We Are
[Warren] painstakingly reconstructs the scene of an entire generation of artists and writers through Jacob's eyes. The level of detail she marshals is impressive... Her greater achievement, however, is her portrait of the tension among art, faith and sexuality in [Jacob's] life... Warren wears many hats--translator, critic, chronicler--to resuscitate a richly contradictory figure and to give him a seat at the table.--Ayten Tartici "New York Times Book Review"
Being a distinguished poet herself, Warren pays particularly close attention to the richness of Jacob's language... [Max Jacob] is definitive and chockablock with entertaining anecdotes.--Michael Dirda "Washington Post"
[A] lively literary biography... Jacob was a Zelig of Paris's bohemian demimondes, but Warren also makes a case for the importance of his ecstatic prose poems and cabaret verse, which appear in her own deft translations.-- "The New Yorker"
Rosanna Warren's impressive achievement allows us to accept, and maybe even to fall in love with, an almost forgotten French writer.--Phil Gambone "Gay and Lesbian Review"
Brilliant... Warren's narrative everywhere glows with the ease and compassion of having lived with her research for many, many years... Max Jacob will likely stand as the definitive English-language life of this perennially enigmatic figure.--Steve Donoghue "Open Letters Review"
Rosanna Warren's Max Jacob is both monumental and intimate, a long-awaited portrait of a highly influential artist who haunts any account of early modernism...Max Jacob led a raucous, poignant, and mysterious life movingly illuminated in this elegant and passionate biography.--Honor Moore, author of Our Revolution
This radiant book will make you love Max Jacob, as his best friend and protégé Picasso undoubtedly did and as Rosanna Warren clearly does. Warren is completely at home in all three of Jacob's fascinating worlds: first, and most importantly, on the page in brilliant verse and prose; second, in Paris, from the heady rise of Modernism to France's ignominious capitulation to Hitler; and third, in the mystical world, to which Jacob was deeply committed. Scrupulously researched and deftly written, Max Jacob is a joy to read.--Christopher Benfey, author of If
Max Jacob, one of the great French avant-garde poets of the early twentieth century, remains surprisingly little known in the English-speaking world. Poet Rosanna Warren's dazzling biography, based on decades of research and superb critical insight, has now made up for this neglect. Max Jacob reads like an absorbing novel but is also superb reportage and literary history. Anyone interested in the brilliant but contradictory period when Paris was the capital of world art will want to read Rosanna Warren's biography.--Marjorie Perloff, author of Unoriginal Genius