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Gore Vidal

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008

Gore Vidal 1925-, American writer, b. West Point, N.Y. He grew up in Washington, D.C., where a formative influence was his witty and scholarly grandfather, Senator Thomas Gore of Oklahoma. Vidal is an acerbic observer of the contemporary American scene and an acute commentator on the nation's history. His first novel, Williwaw (1946), was based on his experiences in World War II. The City and the Pillar (1948, rev. ed. 1965) was one of the first mainstream novels to deal frankly with homosexuality. His best-known novel, Myra Breckenridge (1968), is a witty satire about a man who dies and returns to life as a woman.

Vidal's historical fiction includes an interlocking septet of American novels—consisting of Washington, D.C. (1967), Burr (1973), 1876 (1976), Lincoln (1984), Empire (1987), Hollywood (1990), and The Golden Age (2000)—as well as Julian (1964), Creation (1982), Live from Golgotha (1992), and The Smithsonian Institution (1998). Among his plays are Visit to a Small Planet (1955) and The Best Man (1960). Vidal's sharply argued and often controversial essays have been collected in several volumes, including Reflections on a Sinking Ship (1969), The Second American Revolution (1982), Armageddon (1987), Screening History (1992), United States: Essays 1952-1992 (1993), and The Last Empire: Essays 1992-2000 (2001). He has also written murder mysteries under the name Edgar Box.

Bibliography: See his memoirs, Palimpsest (1995) and Point to Point Navigation (2006); R. J. Stanton and G. Vidal, ed., Views from a Window: Conversations with Gore Vidal (1980); R. Peabody and L. Ebersole, ed., Conversations with Gore Vidal (2005); biography by F. Kaplan (1999); studies by B. F. Dick (1974), R. F. Kiernan (1982), J. Parini, ed. (1992), S. Baker and C. S. Gibson (1997), and S. Harris (2005).



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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press

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He slept with Kerouac, hung out with Jackie O and feuded with Mailer. He's the last surviving giant of American literature's golden age. So why is Gore Vidal still so sensitive about his reputation?
The Independent on Sunday; 5/25/2008; Robert Chalmers; 4837 words ; ... feeling that Amelia Earhart is not just the mother Gore Vidal would like to have had, but also the lover. When Vidal's parents divorced in 1935, his mother married ... they had a daughter, ' also named Nina. After Vidal's mother left, in 1940, to marry "her on-off ... mother of Jackie Kennedy, young ... Read more
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Mail on Sunday; 8/10/2003; WENDY LEIGH; 1641 words ; Gore Vidal's love affair with Ravello started in ... despised convention. The son of Eugene Vidal and Nina Gore, he was brought up in Washington by ... I tell him not to worry. After all, Gore Vidal with half a brain is streets ahead of ... Read more
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Gorefoolery His new novel is a zany advertisement for himself, but two other books - one by him, one about him - suggest Gore Vidal may be the most underrated writer of his time.
The Boston Globe; 9/6/1992; Robert Taylor; 1103 words ; ... suggests Monty Python rather than Voltaire. Of Vidal -- unlikely to suffer the fate of Salman Rushdie ... Modern Dance Company at the Temple of Ephesus. Vidal mocks everyone and his wit is unfailing; but ... to the ignominy of taking things seriously?" Vidal is at his best in "Live from Golgotha" when ... Read more
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Deseret News (Salt Lake City); 11/19/2006; Dennis Lythgoe Deseret Morning News; 790 words ; A genuine renaissance man, Gore Vidal has not only written everything from novels ... to the media. Vidal told the Deseret Morning News that he has found playwriting "pretty exciting ... phone from his Hollywood home, the formidable Vidal seemed relaxed and thoughtful. He is pleased ... volume to ... Read more
Gore Vidal and the state of the union: Gore Vidal has long prophesied what has become commonplace in US politics.(Dissenting Voice)
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THIS GORE (VIDAL) SAYS HE'D BE BETTER CANDIDATE THAN HIS KIN.(Local/State)
The Capital Times (Madison, WI); 8/17/2000; Nichols, John; 593 words ; ... film star and full-time social critic Gore Vidal -- has no qualms about suggesting that ... cousin. ``For 50 years, I was the only Gore,'' Vidal says. Now, at the convention that has nominated Al Gore for president, Gore Vidal says, ``I don't know what to do ... Read more
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Gore Vidal Gives Peace A Vote www.givepeaceavote.org