4.5 stars
I truly enjoyed gaining insight into the working life of one of my all-time favorite authors. West's biography is so comprehensively researched that I found myself wondering several times how on earth he was able to maintain an organized, yet interested approach to nearly each year of Styron's life until the book's publication in 1998.
One thing that may have been difficult in setting out on a project like this is the author's proximity to the subject. Styron was apparently not interested in adding personal, emotional insight into his written story at the time this was being compiled and published in the '90s, and West clearly respected Styron's wishes.
The result is a thorough and insightful -- and admittedly interesting -- biography of Styron's working life and evolution as a professional novelist, but sadly, we don't get much emotional dimension into Styron's inner life.
Still, West tells a very engaging story about Styron's early years and the backgrounds of his parents and grandparents.
My favorite part of the book was the beginning, which painted a lush picture of the aspects of Styron's early formative years -- the 1930's and Depression, his mother's death when he was only 14, and the culture and times of Tidewater Virginia in the years just before World War II.
This setting provides the backdrop for my favorite Styron book, "A Tidewater Morning," a collection of three stories based in his these years.
I re-read "Tidewater" more than 20 years after I read it for the first time in my AP junior English class and was pleasantly delighted to discover that I loved the collection just as much if not more the second time around.
I read "Tidewater," "Darkness Visible" and "The Suicide Run" as I read this biography and enjoyed gaining insight into the writing processes for each.
In doing so I think I found two minor errors on West's part with the timing of a couple aspects of "A Tidewater Morning" (the story) and "Darkness Visible." Both had to do with the timing of a couple key events in the narratives. One was that Styron's discovery that the drug Halcion likely caused his depression was discovered during his hospitalization, and not after. The other is the timing of an argument the protagonist's father had in "Tidewater" with a preacher occurred that before his wife's death. Both of these are extremely minor, but they did catch my eye.
I can see how they occurred. When a writer gets close to finishing a monster of a book like this one, it would be hourly work not to make your eyes glaze over when editing and re-checking facts in timelines. (The text of the book alone is 455 pages, btw, in the first edition; the notes and acknowledgements are another 30-something.)
Overall, I'd say this is not a swashbuckling adventure of a biography. It's unlikely to appeal to broad audience but it would enlighten and delight Styron fans -- especially those who love "A Tidewater Morning" and "Sophie's Choice."