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Allen
Ginsberg, Lionel and Diana Trilling, Hanna Arendt, Norman Mailer, and
Lillian Hellman -among the other things these writers and intellectuals
all had in common is Norman Podhoretz. With them Podhoretz was part
of "The Family," as the core group of New York intellectuals
of the 50s and 60s came to be known. And in Ex-Friends, he has
written the intellectual equivalent of a family history- a sparkling
chronicle of affection and jealousy, generosity and betrayal, breakdowns
and reconciliations, and ultimately of dysfunctions impossible to cure. Ex-Friends
is filled with brilliant portraits of some of the cultural icons who
defined our time. Yet anyone who has followed Norman Podhoretz's career
as a writer and editor and above all one of the leading controversialists
of our time will expect more than just another fond memoir of literary
alliances and quarrels, brilliant talk and bruised egos. Indeed, while
Ex-Friends has some of the elements of a personal diary, it is
also a journal de combat describing the intellectual and social turbulence
of the 60s and 70s and showing how the literary living room was transformed
into a political battleground where the meaning of America was fought
night by night. Against this backdrop, Podhoretz tells how he left The
Family and undertook a trailblazing journey from radical to conservative,
a journey that helped redefine America's intellectual landscape in the
last Selected
by the Philadelphia Inquirer as one of the Best Books of 1999
for autobiography
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