Mccarthy, Mary Therese
Related Category: American Literature: Biographies
191289, American writer, b. Seattle, grad. Vassar, 1933. As drama critic for the
Partisan Review (193745), she gained a reputation for wit, intellect, and acerbity. Her novel
The Oasis (1949) satirizes left-wing intellectuals, whereas
The Group (1963) satirizes an entire generation. Her other novels include
Cast a Cold Eye (1950),
The Groves of Academe (1952),
Birds of America (1971), and
Cannibals and Missionaries (1979). Among her volumes of nonfiction are
Venice Observed (1956),
The Stones of Florence (1959),
Vietnam (1967),
The Mask of State: Watergate Portraits (1974),
Ideas and the Novel (1980), and
How I Grew (1987). A comprehensive collection of her literary, cultural, and political writings was posthumously published as
A Bolt from the Blue and Other Essays (2002). She was married several times, from 193846 to the critic Edmund
Wilson.
See her memoirs, Memories of a Catholic Girlhood (1957) and How I Grew (1985); her correspondence with Hannah Arendt (1995); biographies by C. Gelderman (1988) and F. Kiernan (2000); study by I. Stock (1968); Writing Dangerously: Mary McCarthy and Her World (1992) by C. Brightman.