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Part Blood, Part Ketchup analyzes novels by 20th century authors Edith Wharton, J.D. Salinger, Philip Roth, John Irving, and Jamaica Kincaid, uncovering trends that obliterate cultural divides. With unrestrained American voices, the collective pitch of their complaints soars, revealing an unmistakable formula of heightened self-exposure and fury.

Produktbeschreibung
Part Blood, Part Ketchup analyzes novels by 20th century authors Edith Wharton, J.D. Salinger, Philip Roth, John Irving, and Jamaica Kincaid, uncovering trends that obliterate cultural divides. With unrestrained American voices, the collective pitch of their complaints soars, revealing an unmistakable formula of heightened self-exposure and fury.
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Autorenporträt
By Karen R. Tolchin
Rezensionen
Karen Tolchin's shrewd and vivid Part Blood, Part Ketchup captures the way in which the recent American bildungsroman differs from its European counterparts. The tradition of such books, from Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye to Kincaid's Lucy, angrier, less disciplined, more candid, and in every way more out of control than their European models, and indeed, scarcely take bildung itself very seriously as a possibility whether for their protagonists or anybody else. They differ from their models in ways which parallel how the classic "American Romance" differs from the realist novel, as Richard Chase famously described the distinction years ago. It was particularly exciting to see Wharton's The House of Mirth rendered in this way; that novel reveals an entirely new face -- and the complicated relationship of the protagonist to the narrator makes more sense -- when it is seen in the company of Portnoy's Complaint rather than in the company of The Portait of a Lady. -- John Burt, Brandeis University Karen Tolchin has written a wonderful interdisciplinary study of the American compulsion to tell all in narratives of maturation. Part Blood, Part Ketchup bristles with insight and wit as it ranges over canonical fictions, bestsellers, and popular movies. Among other virtues, the book is a delight to read--and to re-read. A stellar performance. -- Michael T. Gilmore, Paul Prosswimmer Professor of American Literature, Brandeis University