http://cptv.vo.llnwd.net/o2/ypmwebcontent/Commodore%20Skahill/cms%20111611%20c%20seg.mp3
Few novelists of the past 50 years have enjoyed the huge success and lengthy renown of William Styron. With Sophie’s Choice, Lie Down in Darkness, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Confessions of Nat Turner, Styron established himself as a masterful chronicler of the American experience. But his gift for fiction came at a heavy price. The last twenty-five years of Styron’s life were marked by episodes of devastating depression, the first of which he documented with stunning candor in Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness.
Reading My Father is a portrait of this towering, mesmerizing, occasionally crippled man by his youngest daughter, Alexandra Styron. We talk with her about the book today.
Leave your comments below, e-mail colin@wnpr.org or Tweet us @wnprcolin.