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MARY McCARTHY: HER LIFE
The only daughter of Roy Winfield and
Therese (“Tess”) Preston McCarthy, Mary Therese
McCarthy was born on 21 June 1912 in Seattle, Washington.
Following Mary came three brothers: Kevin, Preston, and
Sheridan.
En route to a new home in Minneapolis,
purchased for the family by her paternal grandparents, the
McCarthy children (ages 6, 4, 3, and 1) were orphaned when
their parents became victims of the influenza epidemic of 1918.
The children were taken in by their great-aunt Margaret
Sheridan McCarthy and her new husband, Myers Shriver and
subjected to a horrible life depicted in McCarthy’s work,
Memories of a Catholic Girlhood (1957). After six years with
the Shrivers, Mary was taken back to Seattle to live with her
maternal grandparents, Harold and Augusta Morganstern Preston;
her brothers were sent to boarding school. Mary moved in with
her grandparents in their upper-class home and enjoyed a life
of luxury. Harold, a well-known and successful attorney, and
“Gussie,” known for her beauty and elegance, wanted
Mary to have an excellent education and enrolled her in a
convent school for her primary education and then in the Annie
Wright Seminary for high school. From there she went on to
Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York, and graduated, Phi
Beta Kappa, with her bachelor’s degree in 1933.
Following commencement McCarthy moved to
New York City and married Harold Johnsrud, an aspiring
playwright, the first of her four husbands. They divorced in
1936 and early in 1937, she began a job as an editorial
assistant for the publishing house of Covici-Friede.
By spring 1937, Mary had become involved
with Philip Rahv. Together they revived a literary journal
known as Partisan Review, which had been founded in 1934 by
Rahv and William Phillips. Mary served on the editorial board
along with Dwight Macdonald, F. W. Dupee, and others. She
served as drama critic as well. During that period of time, she
also had book reviews published in The New Republic and The
Nation.
Through her association with Partisan
Review, McCarthy became acquainted with Edmund Wilson, a
well-known literary critic, whom she married in 1938. With
Wilson Mary had her only child, a son named Reuel.
McCarthy’s first book, The Company She Keeps, was
published in 1942.
Following their divorce in 1945, McCarthy
accepted a teaching position for a year at Bard College in
Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, not far north of Vassar. During
that time she met a member of the staff of The New Yorker,
Bowden Broadwater, whom she married in 1946. Much later in her
life, McCarthy returned to teach one semester a year at Bard
College, as the Charles Stevenson Professor of Literature,
between 1986 and her death in 1989. For a semester in 1948,
Mary taught English at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville,
New York. During her marriage to Broadwater, McCarthy was very
prolific in her writing, publishing eight books between 1949
and 1961. She also contributed numerous articles to such
periodicals as Atlantic Monthly, The New Yorker, and
Harper’s, as well as Partisan Review.
While on a lecture tour in Poland for the
United States Information Agency in late 1959 and early 1960,
accompanied by Broadwater and Reuel, McCarthy met and fell in
love with James West. As the Public Affairs Officer for the
U.S. Embassy in Warsaw and director of the embassy’s
branch of the U.S.I.A., West planned their itinerary for the
four weeks they spent in Poland. Following their respective
divorces in 1960 and 1961, McCarthy and West were married in
April 1961.
The Wests maintained two homes, an
apartment in Paris and a house in Castine, Maine, and delighted
in a busy social life together. On 25 October 1989, McCarthy
died of cancer at New York Hospital. At the time of her death,
she was working on the second volume of her autobiography,
published posthumously in 1992 as Intellectual Memoirs: New
York, 1936-1938.
Mary McCarthy was the author of
twenty-eight books during her lifetime, both fiction and
non-fiction. Many of these works comprised chapters that had
previously appeared in periodicals; two were texts of lectures
that she had given. Her novels were partially autobiographical,
and many times, her characters in whole or in part, were based
on her acquaintances. Irvin Stock, a critic whom McCarthy
admired, has said of her novels that “each has so much
life and truth, and is written in a prose so spare, vigorous,
and natural ... yet at the same time [is] so witty, graceful,
and, in a certain way, poetic....”
The breadth of her writing is wide, from
drama reviews to the history of art and architecture, from
cultural criticism to political analysis and travel
observations. She was known for her keen intellect, her wit and
courage, and her literary style that was precise, but graceful.
From her readers and reviewers, she elicited strong reactions
that were frequently negative. She was often referred to as the
“lady with a switchblade.” Wendy Martin, in Modern
American Women Writers (1991), said: “McCarthy was a
survivor rather than a victim; she was unequivocally a writer
of extraordinary range and a citizen of the world.”
McCarthy won a number of literary awards,
among them the Horizon prize (1949) and two Guggenheim
fellowships (1949-50 and 1959-60). Both the MacDowell Medal for
Literature and the National Medal for Literature, were bestowed
upon her in 1984. She was a member of the National Institute of
Arts and Letters, the American Academy and Institute of Arts
and Letters, and the American Academy in Rome. She received
honorary degrees from Bard, Bowdoin, Colby, and Smith Colleges,
Syracuse University, and from the Universities of Aberdeen,
Hull, and Maine at Orono.
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