George Howe Colt is the bestselling author of The Big House, which was a National Book Award finalist and a New York Times Notable Book of the Year; Brothers; November of the Soul; and The Game. He lives in Western Massachusetts with his wife, the writer Anne Fadiman.
“A masterful blend of history and memoir…”
*San Francisco Chronicle*
“A great book—brilliantly conceived, daringly organized, endlessly
fascinating...”
*The Dallas Morning News*
“Part memoir, part exhaustively researched biography of famous
brothers and how they drove each other, loved each other, fought,
drove each other crazy, and supported each other through
craziness…Insightful and harrowing and funny and stacked with
stories.”
*The New Yorker*
“Anyone who’s had the pleasure of reading Colt’s previous, National
Book Award-nominated work, The Big House, will know his delicate,
detailed, ironically self-mocking way with prose, and his lucid,
affectionate fair-mindedness. . .Colt has done a prodigious job of
research and synthesis, and his skill at storytelling is such that
each of them is transformed into something fresh, dramatic, and
emotionally piercing.”
*The New York Times Book Review*
“Colt writes movingly and insightfully about how the mercurial
fraternal relationships can so quickly move from loving idolatry to
hands-around-the-throat…This is one fine book, both wildly
entertaining and utterly thought-provoking.”
*Barron's*
“Vivid and psychologically revealing…”
*Bookpage*
“Detailed considerations…of well-known brothers and cameo
references to many others, famous and not so, help Colt in his
quest to explain the mystery of how siblings can be so different
from one another.”
*The Chicago Tribune*
“Colt elegantly captures the complicated dynamics between brothers
that both bind and define them, as well as the evolving
relationships between his own brothers as they move into middle
age.”
*Parade*
“Colt is an acute observer and sensitive chronicler of male
emotion…Searingly poignant.”
*Boston Globe*
“Colt’s fine writing, extensive research, and thoughtful analysis
make Brothers a meaty, pleasurable read.”
*The Concord Monitor*
“The brotherly counterpoint between fierce rivalry and stalwart
affection is teased out in this absorbing meditation on family
dynamics…No one writers better than Colt about families and the
strange alchemy that binds them, and the way siblings make each
other what they are even as they become distinct, even estranged,
personalities.”
*Publishers Weekly*
“An enjoyable read for members of small and large broods
alike…”
*Booklist*
“The second of four brothers, [Colt] perceptively explores his
fraught relationship with them—the competitiveness and conflicts,
the yearning for a closeness that would not come until several
decades had passed—in the context of an often wistful memoir of
an…American family in the 1950s and ‘60s.”
*Kirkus Reviews*
“As soon as I started reading Brothers, I found myself talking
about it to everyone I saw. You will want to give it to people in
your life. George Howe Colt is a master at balancing the personal
and the universal, and the book makes a powerful case for sibling
rivalry—and love—as a driving force not just in individual lives
but in the world.”
*Maile Meloy, author of Both Ways Is the Only Way I Want It and
Liars and Saints*
“A master craftsman of literary nonfiction, George Howe Colt
brilliantly conjoins history and memoir, insight and humor—not to
mention Cain and Abel, Groucho and Harpo. Every page of this book
is a pleasure.”
*Adam Goodheart, author of 1861: The Civil War Awakening*
"A captivating blend of historical anecdote, personal revelation,
and psychological insight, this lively and imaginative book will
serve up a great deal of wisdom (and just as much fun) to anyone
who has ever been a brother or had a brother. In fact, maybe all
you have to do to derive pleasure and nourishment from Colt's book
is simply to have once met a brother—it’s that appealing."
*Daniel Okrent, author of Last Call: The Rise and Fall of
Prohibition*
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