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My Exaggerated Life

Pat Conroy

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks

An oral biography that reveals the Southern author's true voice

Pat Conroy's memoirs and autobiographical novels contain a great deal about his life, but there is much he hasn't revealed to readers—until now. My Exaggerated Life is the product of a special collaboration between this great American author and oral biographer Katherine Clark, who recorded two hundred hours of conversations with Conroy before he passed away in 2016. In the spring and summer of 2014, the two spoke for an hour or more on the phone every day. No subject was off limits, including aspects of his tumultuous life he had never before revealed.

This oral biography presents Conroy the man, as if speaking in person, in the colloquial voice familiar to family and friends. This voice is quite different from the authorial style found in his books, which are famous for their lyricism and poetic descriptions. Here Conroy is blunt, plainspoken, and uncommonly candid. While his novels are known for their tragic elements, this volume is suffused with Conroy's sense of humor, which he credits with saving his life on several occasions.

The story Conroy offers here is about surviving and overcoming the childhood abuse and trauma that marked his life. He is frank about his emotional damage—the depression, the alcoholism, the divorces, and, above all, the crippling lack of self-esteem and self-confidence. He also sheds light on the forces that saved his life from ruin. The act of writing compelled Conroy to confront the painful truths about his past, while years of therapy with a clinical psychologist helped him achieve a greater sense of self-awareness and understanding.

As Conroy recounts his time in Atlanta, Rome, and San Francisco, along with his many years in Beaufort, South Carolina, he portrays a journey full of struggles and suffering that culminated ultimately in redemption and triumph. Although he gained worldwide recognition for his writing, Conroy believed his greatest achievement was in successfully carving out a life filled with family and friends, as well as love and happiness. In the end he arrived at himself and found it was a good place to be.

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    • Library Journal

      March 15, 2018

      Clark, coauthor of two oral biographies (Motherwit, with Onnie Lee Logan, and Milking the Moon, with Eugene Walter) got to know novelist Pat Conroy through his admiration for her biography of artist Walter. Their literary friendship grew deeper, and together they worked on this book via phone calls--some recorded, some not--toward the end of Conroy's life. During the conversations, which Clark calls "the great good fortune of my life," Conroy offered insights into how his life shaped his fiction, how humor saved his life on more than one occasion, and the ways in which his public personae was very different from the man himself. In his youth, Conroy thought his life would never amount to anything; even with the commercial success of The Great Santini and The Prince of Tides, he still saw himself as "a nobody." Clark, through her interviews with Conroy as well as his family and friends, offers a broader perspective on the author's storytelling abilities, sense of humor, and self-image. VERDICT Conroy's novels and memoirs were (and are) much beloved in many literary circles; Clark's biography offers insight into his writing and thinking process and should be pleasing to his fans.--Pam Kingsbury, Univ. of North Alabama, Florence

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2018
      In which the beloved American novelist Conroy (1945-2016) speaks from beyond the grave, sometimes in the saltiest of language.For close to 200 hours, biographer and novelist Clark (The Headmaster's Darlings, 2015, etc.) turned on the tape recorder and let it roll in the presence of the loquacious Conroy, who obliged, providing a wealth of observations, anecdotes, shaggy dog stories, and complaints. The last are not many, but like many writers, Conroy keeps a running score of injuries, insults, and bad press. Though he professes not to read his reviews, we all know better than that; in any event, he tells a pleasing tale of running into Gail Godwin, who "gave me a horrible review for The Prince of Tides in the New York Times," and laughing off the encounter as a well-earned scar, to which he adds that he's not one of those to be scared off by the opinions of others, even if other voices have been stilled by timidity. The passages on military school and growing up in the service are especially revelatory. In one of the wisest of his remarks, Conroy ventures that "much of what we do in life is repair work on our childhood." Certainly, that was the case in his breakthrough novel The Great Santini and, to a lesser extent, in books such as The Lords of Discipline, the latter of which, he recounts, caused Gore Vidal to remark that it "could have been a good book if only I'd known that all those guys were gay." Conroy is unguarded and refreshingly open on many matters of the flesh, as when he remarks that going to Catholic school "fucked up everything connected with my dick and my brain."The occasional outburst of adult themes notwithstanding, this makes good reading not just for Conroy's fans, but also teenagers seeking a literary path out of the confusion as well as grown-ups reckoning with their own lives.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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