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English
NYRB Classics
15 September 2014
Totempole is Sanford Friedman's radical coming-of-age novel, featuring Stephen Wolfe, a young Jewish boy growing up in New York City and its environs during the Depression and war years. In eight discrete chapters, which trace Stephen's evolution from a two-year-old boy to a twenty-two-year-old man, Friedman describes with psychological acuity and great empathy Stephen's intellectual, moral, and sexual maturation. Taught to abhor his body for the sake of his soul, Stephen finds salvation in the eventual unification of the two, the recognition that body and soul should not be partitioned but treated as one being, one complete man.
By:  
Afterword by:  
Imprint:   NYRB Classics
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   Main
Dimensions:   Height: 203mm,  Width: 133mm,  Spine: 23mm
Weight:   461g
ISBN:   9781590177617
ISBN 10:   1590177614
Pages:   432
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Born in New York City, Sanford Friedman (1928-2010) was an American novelist and playwright, who taught writing at Juilliard. After graduating from the Carnegie Institute of Technology, he served in the army in Korea from 1951 to 1953, where he was awarded a Bronze Star. His unpublished last novel, Conversations with Beethoven, will be published in fall 2014 by NYRB Classics. Peter Cameron is the author of several novels, including Andorra, The Weekend, and most recently, Coral Glynn. He lives in New York City.

Reviews for Totempole

The Koren War, that immense and forgotten midcentury moment, found its unlikely and entirely original chronicler in Sanford Friedman, whose first novel Totempole was brave and frank about a young soldier's homosexual awakening, at a time when timidity and weak suggestion were the rule. Having barely achieved publication in 1961, Friedman's great-hearted masterpiece was forgotten, recovered in the mid-eighties, then forgotten again. May it now be with us to stay. Benjamin Taylor, author of Naples Declared ""Totempole is the most audacious affirmation of the homosexual experience by an American writer I have seen, and its success is the more remarkable because nearly all the materials of this novel are not only familiar but fashionable...[Friedman] explores a recognizable terrain and leaves it deeply illumined."" Hilton Kramer, The New Leader ""It proves to be the most candid, and least pornographic, of studies of the genesis of a homosexual; paradoxically, by close concentration on the agonies of a young man searching for sexual fulfillment...This was a dangerous book to write...Its impact as a document of great honesty will, without doubt, be considerable."" Anthony Burgess, The Listener ""I think Totempole an extraordinarily courageous and highly moral work. The author tells us exactly what it was like to be himself at a certain time and place and, uniquely, I believed him. Truth is rare; he seems to have it."" Gore Vidal ""An extraordinary book, vivid and utterly convincing...The truth of Mr. Friedman's book is not the truth of autobiography, but the truth-making that the best fiction is."" James Dickey ""I do not know of any piece of fiction that deals more perceptively with preadolescent sex...Wholly honest...Friedman treats the homosexual theme, as he does the theme of infant sexuality, with great candor and no lubricity...There are episodes developed with unusual imaginative power."" Granville Hicks, Saturday Review


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