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The Wallace Markfield Papers
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Wallace Markfield |
In many of his short works and in his first three novels–-To An Early Grave (1964), Teitelbaum’s Window (1971),
You Could Live If They Let You (1974)—Wallace Markfield wrote with
satiric wit and Jewish humor about working-class New York characters he had observed during his growing-up years in Brooklyn from the 1930’s to 1950’s.
Greatly interested in the movies, he often turned a camera eye on details of his milieu. Having
suffered some disappointments in his own academic studies of history and in his academic appointments, he also
turned a satiric eye on American academia. His fourth novel, Multiple Orgasms (1977), was published as a segment
of a novel he never finished. There followed a long hiatus before he published his fifth novel, Radical Surgery
(1991), a political thriller. He published little or no additional work.
Wallace Markfield died May 24, 2002 at the age in 75 in Roslyn, New York.
For further bio-critical
discussion, begin with WALLACE MARKFIELD in Dictionary of Literary Biography (DLB
2, 1984), and Contemporary Jewish-American
Novelists (DLB 28, 1997), ed. Joel Shatsky and Michael Traub, pp.
215-217.
The collection of Wallace Markfield’s papers in the Rare Books and Special Collections Department in the Thomas Cooper
Library at the University of South Carolina spans the years of publication of the last four of his five novels. Included
in the collection are various outlines, typescript drafts and proofs of critical essays, and two unpublished plays. Also
included are letters to Matthew J. Bruccoli dating from 1975-1983. In
addition to the Markfield papers, Professor Bruccoli donated a collection of
Markfield's published writings, accessible through the library's online
catalogue USCAN.
Clyde H. Dornbusch
April 2002
Contact Information:
Rare Books and Special Collections
Thomas Cooper Library
University of South
Carolina
Columbia, SC 29208
Phone: 803-777-8154
Email: TCLRareBooks@gwm.sc.edu
Updated 29 July 2002 by the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections
Prepared for the web by Eva Moore.
Copyright
© 2002, the University of South Carolina
URL: http://www.sc.edu/library/spcoll/amlit/markfield.html
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