About Schmidt
1998 Nominated

About Schmidt

artwork-image

ABOUT
THE BOOK

After years of careful management, the life of Albert Schmidt – proud, traditional gentleman and lawyer of the old school – lies about him in shambles. The wife he adored is recently dead. The clients he has served superbly and devotedly throughout his long career are turning to his firm’s aggressive young comers as Schmidt stumbles into early retirement. And relations with his only child are going from bad to worse. Charlotte, once the flower of all her father’s hopes, and the sole beneficiary of the best of everything he could provide, has matured into a banal yuppie, only too willing to apply her peerless education to work in public relations. And now a desperate quarrel divides them: Charlotte announces her intention to marry a man Schmidt cannot approve of, for reasons he can scarcely admit – even to himself. As the beleaguered father gropes his way out of the corners he is forever backing himself into, he finds the possibility of regeneration, perhaps even happiness, in a new love the old “Schmidtie” could not have imagined.
Set in the Hamptons and Manhattan, infused with black humor and startling eroticism, Louis Begley’s fourth novel casts a cold, pitiless eye on a class once-ascendant on the eastern seaboard as it is pushed aside by those whose fortunes are rising. About Schmidt is a meditation on loneliness and on the power of romance to unlock the most impenetrable recesses of the heart; it brilliantly enlarges Begley’s exploration of the tragic themes that haunt his earlier works.

ABOUT
THE AUTHOR Louis
Begley

Louis Begley was born in Poland in 1933. He was able to escape the Holocaust and after the Second World War moved to the United States with his family. He was naturalised in 1953 and studied English literature at Harvard University. After military service in Göppingen he returned to Harvard and graduated in law. Until the 1990s he was associated with the major New York law firm Debevoise & Plimpton, first as a staff attorney, later as a senior partner.
Louis Begley’s first novel Wartime Lies, the story of a Jewish boy who escapes the Holocaust, was published in 1990. It received several awards and quickly became a bestseller. Other novels followed, including About Schmidt, the basis for the eponymous Hollywood film starring Jack Nicholson. From 1993 to 1995 Louis Begley was president of the American P.E.N. Centre. The Suhrkamp-Verlag, publisher of the German translation of his latest book on the Dreyfus affair, has this to say about the work: “Louis Begley shows how, then as today, anti-Semitism and racism function in an outwardly liberal society. Charges are based on prejudice, racial profiling replaces the quest for truth, evidence is trumped up. Guantánamo is closer to Devil’s Island than we might care to think.”

Louis Begley was born in Poland in 1933. He was able to escape the Holocaust and after the Second World War moved to the United States with his family. He was naturalised in 1953 and studied English literature at Harvard University. After military service in Göppingen he returned to Harvard and graduated in law. Until the 1990s he was associated with the major New York law firm Debevoise & Plimpton, first as a staff attorney, later as a senior partner.
Louis Begley’s first novel Wartime Lies, the story of a Jewish boy who escapes the Holocaust, was published in 1990. It received several awards and quickly became a bestseller. Other novels followed, including About Schmidt, the basis for the eponymous Hollywood film starring Jack Nicholson. From 1993 to 1995 Louis Begley was president of the American P.E.N. Centre. The Suhrkamp-Verlag, publisher of the German translation of his latest book on the Dreyfus affair, has this to say about the work: “Louis Begley shows how, then as today, anti-Semitism and racism function in an outwardly liberal society. Charges are based on prejudice, racial profiling replaces the quest for truth, evidence is trumped up. Guantánamo is closer to Devil’s Island than we might care to think.”

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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Country
United States
Author
Publisher
Alfred A. Knopf

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