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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Saul_BellowSaul Bellow - Wikipedia

    e. Saul Bellow (born Solomon Bellows; June 10, 1915 – April 5, 2005) [ 1] was an American writer. For his literary work, Bellow was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, the 1976 Nobel Prize in Literature, and the National Medal of Arts. [ 2] He is the only writer to win the National Book Award for Fiction three times, [ 3] and he received the National ...

  2. Apr 29, 2015 · April 29, 2015. When Saul Bellow emerged and solidified as an intellectual presence—in Chicago and New York during the 1940s—he seemed formidably, enviably, indeed inexcusably well equipped to ...

    • Early Life
    • Early Work and Critical Success
    • The Chicago Years and Commercial Success
    • Humboldt’s Gift
    • Later Work
    • Ravelstein
    • Literary Style and Themes
    • Saul Bellow’s Women
    • Legacy
    • Sources

    Saul Bellow was born in Lachine, Quebec, the youngest of four siblings. His parents were of Jewish-Lithuanian ancestry and had recently immigrated to Canada from Russia. A debilitating respiratory infection he contracted at the age of eight taught him self-reliance, and he took advantage of his condition to catch up on his reading. He credits the b...

    During his service in the army, he completed his novel Dangling Man (1944), about a man waiting to be drafted for the war. The almost non-existent plot centers on a man named Joseph, a writer and intellectual who, frustrated with his life in Chicago, isolates himself to study the great men of literature, while waiting to be drafted for the war. The...

    After living in New York for a number of years, he returned to Chicago in 1962, as he had been appointed professor of the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago. He would hold that position for more than 30 years. To Bellow, Chicago embodied the essence of America, more so than New York. "Chicago, with its gigantesque outer life, ...

    Humboldt’s Gift, written in 1975, is the novel that won Saul Bellow the 1976 Pulitzer Prize and was crucial in earning him the Nobel Prize in literature the same year. A roman à clef about his friendship with the poet Delmore Schwartz, Humboldt's Gift explores the significance of being an artist or an intellectual in contemporary America by juxtapo...

    The 1980s were quite a prolific decade for Bellow, as he wrote four novels: The Dean’s December (1982), More Die of Heartbreak (1987), A Theft (1989), and The Bellarosa Collection (1989). The Dean’s December features the standard Bellow-novel protagonist, a middle-aged man who, in this case, is an academic and is accompanying his Romanian-born astr...

    In 2000, aged 85, Bellow published his final novel. It’s a roman à clef written in the form of a memoir, about the friendship between Abe Ravelstein, a professor, and Nikki, a Malaysian writer. The real-life references are the philosopher Allan Bloom and his Malaysian lover Michael Wu. The narrator, who meets the pair in Paris, is asked by a dying ...

    Starting from his first novel, The Dangling Man (1944) all the way to Ravelstein (2000), Bellow created a series of protagonists who, with barely any exceptions, struggle coming to terms with the world around them; Joseph, Henderson and Herzog are only a few examples. They are usually contemplative individuals at odds with America’s society, which ...

    Saul Bellow was married five times and was known for his affairs. Greg, his eldest son, a psychotherapist who wrote a memoir titled Saul Bellow’s Heart (2013), described his father as an “epic philanderer.” The reason why this is relevant is that his women were his literary muses, as he based a number of characters on them. He got engaged to his fi...

    Saul Bellow is widely regarded as one of America’s most notable writers, whose wide variety of interests included sports and the violin (his mother wanted him to become either a rabbi or a musician). In 1976, he won both the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the Nobel Prize in literature. In 2010, he was inducted into the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame...

    Amis, Martin. “The Turbulent Love Life of Saul Bellow.” Vanity Fair, Vanity Fair, 29 Apr. 2015, https://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2015/04/saul-bellow-biography-zachary-leader-martin-amis.
    Hallordson, Stephanie S. The Hero in Contemporary American Fiction, MacMillan, 2007
    Menand, Louis. “Saul Bellow's Revenge.” The New Yorker, The New Yorker, 9 July 2019, https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/05/11/young-saul.
    Pifer, Ellen. Saul Bellow Against The Grain, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1991
    • Angelica Frey
  3. Saul Bellow was known to have multiple romantic affairs in his lifetime. He had married five times, of which four marriages ended in a divorce. Saul Bellow married Anita Goshkin in 1937 and the couple had a son named Greg Bellow, who grew up to become a psychotherapist. In 1956, they parted ways.

  4. Nov 4, 2018 · The Life of Saul Bellow: Love and Strife, 1965-2005 By Zachary Leader Knopf, ... Bellow had married five times and sired three combative sons. His fifth wife, Janis, 43 years his junior, gave ...

  5. Dec 16, 2022 · Novelist Saul Bellow laughs as his wife, Alexandra adjusts his tie during a ball at Stockholm's City Hall, in honor of Nobel Prize winners on Friday evening, Dec. 10, 1976.

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  7. Saul Bellow >An American author of fiction, essays, and drama, ... On 10 December 1961 Bellow married Susan Glass-man, and the couple subsequently had a son.

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