James McGrath Morris is the author of several critically acclaimed biographies, including the New York Times bestselling Eye on the Struggle: Ethel Payne, The First Lady of the Black Press and Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power. He has appeared on NPR's All Things Considered, PBS's News Hour, and C-Span's Book TV. He was the founding editor of the monthly Biographer's Craft and has served as both the executive director and president of Biographers International Organization (BIO). Morris lives in Tesuque, New Mexico.
"[Morris] does a good job of identifying the differences in the two
men's novel-writing styles and in the audiences they
cultivated...One comes away from this book wanting to read or
reread Dos Passos...Recommended."
--Choice
"The Ambulance Drivers is an exciting, revealing, important book
that evokes a fascinating era. It shows us Hemingway in a new
perspective and, equally important, gives Dos Passos the major
attention that he indisputably deserves."--David Morrell, New York
Times bestselling author of Murder as a Fine Art
"The Ambulance Drivers is one of those rare and gratifying books
that seamlessly drops gems of insight on history, art, and politics
into a taut and suspenseful story of one of the great literary
friendships of the twentieth century."--Debby Applegate, Pulitzer
Prize-winning author of The Most Famous Man in America
"[An] illuminating examination of the relationship between two
great American writers."--Terry Fallis, Toronto Globe and Mail
"[An] unknown story about two great American
authors...Absorbing...James McGrath Morris brings us a new saga in
the ever-fascinating world of Ernest Hemingway."--Berkshire
Eagle
"[A] highly entertaining biography of a decades-long and often
rivalrous literary friendship." --Santa Fe New Mexican
"A fascinating story of the friendship between literary giants...A
great telling of their struggles and of what led to their
successes." --San Francisco Book Review
"A superb examination of the bond that helped shape the modern
literary movement in America...A fascinating read that will satisfy
specialized scholars and general audiences alike with its careful
research and highly readable narrative. The book offers more than
straight biography of two of the 20th century's most important
American authors-it intertwines selections from works they were
producing at significant points in their lives...Morris is
masterful in his weaving of the Hemingway and Dos Passos
timelines...Morris is adept at making the historical record
lifelike, giving a palpable sense of the climate in which these
modern writers were forged...Thoughtful and engaging...The
Ambulance Drivers will do for Hemingway criticism what Scott
Donaldson's vigorous Hemingway and Fitzgerald: The Rise and Fall of
a Literary Friendship did in 1999: offer a complete post-mortem
analysis of a critically important friendship that had a part in
shaping a literary movement."--Washington Independent Review of
Books
"A well-researched book made all the more helpful by copious notes
and a good bibliography. For Hemingway and Dos Passos fans, this
will be a must-read...A compelling examination of an at-times
frail, turbulent and broken friendship."--Army Ancestry Research
blog
"Compelling and insightful...Morris's extensive research on his two
subjects is evident...While it's easy for some biographies to be
bogged down in details and facts, The Ambulance Drivers is a fluid,
engrossing read."
--Portland Book Review
"Deftly catches the essence of the duo's mercurial relationship-and
the events that led to the destruction of their friendship...[A]
multifaceted book."--Idaho Statesman
"Delves head first into the mercurial relationship of these two
American literary legends...Throughout this riveting biography
Morris expertly narrates the journeys, relationships, and
life-changing events that inspired two of the greatest authors of
the 20th century...A lively and engaging biography that takes a
fresh look at the life of Dos Passos....Although readers may at
first hesitate to embark on yet another analysis of Ernest
Hemingway, Morris' framing of the context of his fragile and
contemptuous relationship with fellow literary giant John Dos
Passos creates a worthwhile read. It will most certainly fascinate
Dos Passos and Hemingway aficionados, as well as the casual
literary biography enthusiast." --New York Journal of Books
"Dos Passos gets his due in James McGrath Morris' The Ambulance
Drivers...A well-written and interesting book about an interesting
time and two very interesting writers."--Washington Times
"Extremely well-researched, The Ambulance Drivers is the tale of
two American writers whose work was affected heavily by the angels
and demons of a lost generation that conspired to put them at
odds."--Chico News & Review
"Full of historical and personal details."--Dallas Morning News
"Here is a story of war, love, and politics writ large, a story of
two literary lions trapped in a double-helix relationship more
powerful than either will admit. In this intricately braided dual
biography, Morris shows us how the two novelists needed each other,
even as they differed--often drastically so--in the way they
negotiated the gravitational forces of their times."--Hampton
Sides, bestselling author of In the Kingdom of Ice and Ghost
Soldiers
"In this ingenious dual narrative, James McGrath Morris gives us
two lives in high contrast, rendering sharp, revelatory portraits
of literary icons we thought we already knew. Writing with deep
knowledge and sympathy, Morris has created something rare and
fresh: a biography of a friendship."--Megan Marshall, Pulitzer
Prize-winning author of Margaret Fuller and Elizabeth Bishop: A
Miracle for Breakfast
"Intimate, vivid, and humane, The Ambulance Drivers propels readers
through the intersecting lives of two of our greatest writers.
Never have Ernest Hemingway and John Dos Passos seemed so real or
so important as in James McGrath Morris's account of their passage
through the Great War and the rise of fascism."--T.J. Stiles,
author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Custer's Trials
"James McGrath Morris is to be commended for doing something
unusual and highly necessary in his book...Rather than merely
recycle aspects or elements of the all-too-familiar Hemingway
legend, what Morris has done is focus with superlative intent on
recapitulating how the First World War galvanized the coming-of-age
of young Hemingway."--HoneySuckle Magazine
"James McGrath Morris jettisons most of the minutiae necessary in a
normal biography and the result reads more like a novel than a
biography. The protagonist is a self-effacing writer, John Dos
Passos, and the antagonist a demon-ridden artist, Ernest Hemingway.
Morris lets the chips fall where they may."--Buffalo News
"James McGrath Morris looks closely at the difficult friendship of
Hemingway and Dos Passos."--Elaine Showalter, New York Times
"Morris provides a unique perspective by narrating the two authors'
life experiences in a way that all veterans can relate to after
returning home with the scars of war...This book is a must for
anyone with interest in the early portions of the 1900s and how the
'Great World' and the 'war to end all wars' shaped the world we
live in today. Morris does an outstanding job of relating the
real-life experiences of the two main characters throughout the
book to lay the ground work for further investigation of
Hemingway's and Dos Passos's written works."
--Military Review
"Morris tugs the reader into the boozy, bitchy world of his
protagonists. Famous friends bustle in and out...As readable as a
novel."--The Economist
"Morris writes like an expressionist painter, evoking the essence
of Hemingway and Dos Passos's hard-drinking writing life in Paris,
Madrid, and Key West. The Ambulance Drivers is a deft and classy
literary adventure, infused with wine, beautiful women, and genuine
pathos."--Kai Bird, Pulitzer Prize-winning coauthor of American
Prometheus
"Morris's evocative writing and finely tuned research brings alive
the richness of the past--the thronging cafes of Paris, the
mortared trenches of Italy, the bullfights of Pamplona, the
sun-bleached houses of Key West--as well as the complex
personalities of these two great American writers. A tragic story,
beautifully written and compulsively readable."--Douglas Preston,
#1 New York Times bestselling author of The Lost City of the Monkey
God
"Relates in impressive detail the friendship and falling out
between two idealistic men whose lives were changed and careers
launched while in the trenches."
--EMS World
"The book ostensibly focuses on their work as ambulance drivers,
picking up and transporting badly wounded and dead soldiers, but it
also presents the following years of their lives: their
inspirations, their relationships, their successes, their
failures." --Curled Up with a Good Book
"The story of the close yet volatile friendship between John Dos
Passos and Ernest Hemingway...[A] lively biography of their
relationship...A welcome new look at Dos Passos and another sad
chapter in the life of Hemingway."
--Kirkus Reviews
"The story of Hemingway and Dos Passos is as exciting as any of
their novels...A quick-paced narrative that weaves back and forth
between the two men's lives...A riveting and rollicking good
read...Sanitizing any dry academic influences, [McGrath Morris]
pares his subjects down to an essence that makes them seem
real...The book is hard to put down, and leaves us feeling closer
to these two remarkable men...There's no doubting that the lives of
this generation of writers forms every bit as important a part of
their story as the books they produced. The Ambulance Drivers
offers a delightful and entertaining entry into that
world."--Popmatters
"Trim and absorbing."--Washington Post
"Two of the most significant writers of their generation, John Dos
Passos and Ernest Hemingway, are described by Morris in his
evocative, lively volume about how differently they emerged from
the crucible of WWI...Morris's narrative demonstrates how, despite
jealousies and differences, the two men found common ground...Dos
Passos will be the less recognizable name to most readers, and
Morris does a great service by reinserting him into the picture of
post-WWI American writers."
--Publishers Weekly
"Unusual and highly necessary...The value of this important new
biography is that we are reminded of how much has been lost-for
decades-as the Hemingway Industry stayed in overdrive, while the
great and good works of John Dos Passos were gradually consigned to
oblivion...We have lost a great deal by not paying more attention
to the life and work of John Dos Passos. This new book helps us to
rectify that error...Hemingway will always be important. But the
most important thing about this new biography is that it reminds us
that reading John Dos Passos is even more essential."
--Neworld Review
"With a clear, direct narrative...James McGrath Morris offers
insight into what brought these writers together and what tore them
apart. An eye for telling detail makes the postwar world come alive
for readers...[Morris] brings these writers to life." --New Mexico
Magazine
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