Soul Mates of the Lost Generation recovers for contemporary readers one of the last great collections of letters of the Jazz Age. It is the correspondence between the pioneering novelist John Dos Passos and a young woman named Crystal Ross, to whom he was engaged and who reveals herself as one of the truly daring, vivacious spirits of that extraordinary time. Before his passing in 2015, Ross’s son, the esteemed literary scholar Lewis M. Dabney, completed a dual biography of the couple’s time together based on this rare correspondence.
The bulk of the letters were written between 1923 and 1928, during Dos Passos’s first major creative period. The letters relate scenes from the pair’s life in the rich culture of Paris in the 1920s and their association with Hemingway, the Fitzgeralds, and other figures of literary modernism. Engaged in 1924, Dos Passos and Ross often corresponded about their ongoing work and the work of others in Dos Passos’s circle. Dos Passos introduced his fiancée to Hemingway, and the couple accompanied him and other writers on an early trip to Pamplona, the setting of The Sun Also Rises, in which Ross makes a cameo appearance. This collection of never-before-seen letters offers rare insights into the life of the influential modernist author of Manhattan Transfer, The 42nd Parallel, and The Big Money, and into that of a remarkably independent, fascinating woman.
قائمة المحتويات
Foreword by Jed Perl
Preface
1. Dos and Crys
2. A Texas Expatriate
3. A Rover on the Road
4. Paris and Pamplona in the Summer of 1924
5. Love and Duty
6. Winter Struggles, Spring Blues
7. Crys Makes a Decision-Dos to the Rescue
8. Interlude in Paris-Ties to Strasbourg-Home as Found
9. Madame Butterfly
10. Two Marriages
11. C.R.D. on Hemingway and Others
12. Dos Passos’s Women in Manhattan Transfer and U.S.A.
13. The Unorthodox New Dealer and the Unlikely Republican
Appendices
عن المؤلف
The late Lewis M. Dabney, son of Crystal Ray Ross Dabney, was Professor of English at the University of Wyoming and the author of numerous books, including the celebrated Edmund Wilson: A Life in Literature.