Muriel Spark: The Biography, by Martin Stannard; Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2009, $66.95.
For those who believe a great author should be remembered more for her work than her life, any biography will fall short, since it isn’t literary criticism. Biography serves a different purpose and has different readers. While some readers do want a biography to shed more light on her work, some are obsessed with a psychological dissection of her life, some crave gossip and other forms of debunking, and some are simply celebrity voyeurs. Given such tabloid tendencies—of looking for the bad and wanting to know whether the great author was an ungrateful daughter, a difficult sister, a poor wife, an uncaring mother, a petulant celebrity, an intellectual snob, a disloyal friend, and finally, when all the men in her life failed her, whether she became a lesbian—it must be hard for the serious biographer to strike the right balance between two extremes: being a Frank Kermode at one end; being a Kitty Kelley at the other. Martin Stannard is in a unique position to achieve a perfect balance, since he’s a professor of modern literature, but there’s a story behind this long-awaited biography of Muriel Spark, one of the twentieth century’s most gifted and original authors.
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