Edmund Morris (born May 27,
1940) is an
American writer best known for his biographies of
United States Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and
Ronald Reagan.
Morris was born in
Nairobi, Kenya, the son of
South African parents May (Dowling) and
Eric Edmund Morris, an airline pilot.[1] He received his early, British-influenced education in
Kenya and then studied music, art, and literature at
Rhodes University in
Grahamstown, South Africa.
Dropping out of college in
1961, he worked in the retail advertising department of a menswear store in
Durban. Most of the brochures and advertisements he designed and wrote were for the
Zulu market, and he later claimed that this early training in "making words move merchandise" was invaluable to the formation of his literary style.[2]
Moving to
Britain in 1964, he abandoned dreams of becoming a concert pianist and was employed as a copywriter in the
London office of
Foote, Cone & Belding, an
American advertising agency. In 1966 he married
Sylvia Jukes, an
English teacher and writer, and emigrated with her to the
United States two years later.[3]
Morris's first book,
The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt, was published when he was thirty-nine. The first volume of what would eventually become a trilogy on the life of the 26th president, it won the
1980 Pulitzer Prize and
National Book Award for biography.[4]
In
1981, Ronald Reagan became
President of the United States and was impressed by a reading of The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt.
Senator Mark O. Hatfield of
Oregon and
Librarian of Congress Daniel J. Boorstin urged
Reagan aides to appoint Morris as the president's official biographer. Morris met with Reagan on several occasions in 1981-1983, but was reluctant to put aside work on
Theodore Rex, the second volume of his life of
Roosevelt.[5] However, in
1985 Morris recognized that Reagan had become a figure of high historical importance, and signed a $3 million contract with
Random House to write his authorized biography. He reached a private agreement with the president and first lady that granted him regular interviews with them and their children, as well as unlimited access to the
White House, by means of a pass that made him a non-governmental observer of the administration. This "fly-on-the-wall" privilege was made doubly unusual by Reagan's willingness to let Morris write his biography without any editorial control.[6]
Morris spent the next fourteen years researching and writing the story of Reagan's life in
Washington D.C. and
Santa Monica, California. He continued to see the former president in retirement, and worked extensively in the
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, enjoying special access to Reagan's personal papers. His manuscript, prepared under conditions of great secrecy, was edited by
Robert Loomis, executive editor at Random House.[7] The biography's long gestation was the result of a radical change in narrative method, caused by Morris's frustration with what he has described as Reagan's lack of "curiosity about himself."[8] Morris confided this frustration in
1989 to a group of fellow scholars at the
University of Virginia's
Miller Center of Public Affairs. His remarks were leaked to the press and gave rise to rumors that Morris did not understand his subject.[9]
In
1999 Morris published
Dutch: A Memoir of Ronald Reagan. The book caused an international sensation because it was presented, without explanation or apology, as a work of nonfiction by an imaginary author.[10] Although the story of Reagan's life was authentic and documented with 153 pages of notes, the parallel "story" of its author, one "
Arthur Edmund Morris" born in
Chicago in 1912, enraged many critics and readers who had been expecting a conventional presidential biography.[11] Dutch rose quickly to
No. 2 on the
New York Times Best Seller list. But despite a minority of favorable reviews, and the endorsements of three of Reagan's children,[12] reactions to it were generally so negative that it soon fell off the list.[13]
Morris explained in many interviews that his book's unique narrative form — a memoir written by a close observer of whom Reagan is never really aware — was a literary device reflecting the essentially thespian nature of his subject. Reagan, he said, was an enigma to anyone who sought to explain him by orthodox means. Widely beloved, the man had no close friends; seemingly passive and gentle, he yet exerted unstoppable force; although his id was formidable, he had no personal vanity. "He was truly one of the strangest men who's ever lived," Morris told
Lesley Stahl on
CBS's 60 Minutes. "
Nobody around him understood him. I, every person I interviewed, almost without exception, eventually would say, 'You know, I could never really figure him out.'"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Morris_%28writer%29
- published: 23 Feb 2015
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