A full-scale biography of one of American literature's most enigmatic figures portrays the award-winning fiction writer through all the drama, passion, excitement, and carefully constructed fiction of her ninety-year life
Joan Givner is a former English professor at the University of Regina. She is the author of the Ellen Fremedon series (Groundwood). She has published biographies of Katherine Anne Porter and Mazo de la Roche, as well as an autobiography. She is the winner of the 1992 CBC fiction competition.
I have no idea why I decided to add this book to my list; I had no idea who Katherine Anne Porter was beforehand, and I've never read any of her books. Joan Givner is, as it turns out, of my alma mater, but I'm sure that wasn't the reason I added it. Either way, it was on my list of Books To Read, and so I read it.
I assume that Givner actually liked Porter, given that Porter personally asked her to write her biography and because she did a very good job of learning everything there was to know about Porter, even stuff that seemed complete inconsequential (in a recreational creative writing class Porter once taught, she had a student who was an ornithologist. There are several sentences detailing her knowledge of birds. This woman is never mentioned again). With this assumption, I have to assume that Givner wrote a very balanced booked, because Porter does not seem likable at all. She was capricious, self-aggrandizing, a habitual liar, seemed to use everyone who came into her life, and apparently did not respond well to criticism at all (which leads me to believe that, had she lived to see this book published, she probably would have regretted asking Givner to be her biographer).
The biography itself is meticulously researched and incredibly detailed. It's written very academically, which was a bit of a disappointment after reading two other dynamic biographies this month, but it is very easy to read and doesn't bore despite the academic tone.
And, I'll add, on a personal note, it was very inspiring. As someone who has wanted to be an author since I was five, it's inspiring that Porter was such an acclaimed author despite never publishing a novel until she was 70 (and she didn't publish any short stories until she was in her 30s). For over twenty-years, she kept working at her novel, and eventually got it done. Hopefully I can take a page from her book in that regard, even if I'd be better off not mimicking anything at all in her personality.
Poor Joan Givner got so much grief for her biography of Porter, but it's really a very good biography. Givner may have been brutally honest about Porter's flaws, but she shows Porter to be all the more interesting for them. I will always have a soft spot in my heart for Porter because of how Givner told the story of her life.
This took me forever to finish, but I was determined. And while I enjoyed reading about Porter, this biography was a slog. As Blake Bailey has demonstrated in his bios of Cheever and Yates, a long biography doesn't need to be boring, and nor does it need to read like an overlong graduate school thesis, which is what this book read like. Read it only if you're DYING to know about KAP.