Review:
REVIEWS FROM PREVIOUS PUBLICATION BY DOUBLEDAY "Inspired a kind of nostalgia by proxy for the good times in Paris from 1968 until 1973, when so many Americans passing through would drop in at the Joneses' house on the Ils St. Louis to play poker or argue politics or dance to the music of the 1940s or watch a tipsy James Baldwin mount the pulpit that Jones kept in their living room and heap fire and brimstone on the evils of drinking... As much autobiography as it is a portrait of another." - New York Times "The story of Jones as written by another writer, Willie Morris, but it is more, much more... Morris explores Jones' early life, his exile, his peacetime army stint and the attack on Pearl Harbor. He covers the war in the Pacific, the time spent in the military hospital and his first successes. Comments from peers add to the picture of fond remembrance of America's favorite writers." - The State- Journal Register, Springfield, IL "Morris' loosely biographical book is at its best when it describes these last years, when the two men became close friends. Particularly affecting is his description of a trip they took with their sons to visit the sites of Civil War battles, including Antietam, where 23,000 men died in one day. 'The way men go to die,' Jim said, looking down at the ridge before us. 'It's incredibly sad. It breaks my heart. You wonder why it was necessary, why human beings have to do that to each other.' Perhaps these words would seem banal in most mouths. But coming from James Jones, who spent a lifetime writing about soldiers, they resonate." - Washington Post Book World "A memoir that is valuable not only for its illumination of a distinguished and deadly earnest novelist, but as a record of the international community of writing during the 1950s, '60s, and '70s." - Booklist "An eloquent, intensely moving and perfectly painted portrait of a rare and precious friend... A book both devoted to and revealing of its subject... Incredibly rich, warm and honest, this account could only come from a writer's deepest thoughts, feelings and affections." - The Christian Science Monitor "A refreshing tribute to a man who, it appears, was as impressive a human being as he was a writer. Novelist Morris movingly and evocatively describes his ten-year friendship with Jones... An engaging portrait: anecdotal and affectionate, witty and wise." - Library Journal
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