By Love Possessed (novel)

By Love Possessed

First edition
Author James Gould Cozzens
Cover artist Johannes Troyer[1]
Country United States
Language English
Publisher Harcourt Brace and Company
Publication date
1957
Media type Print
Pages 570

By Love Possessed is a novel written by James Gould Cozzens in the middle 1950s. It was published on August 26, 1957, by Harcourt Brace and Company, and became a critically acclaimed best-seller. In 1960, it was awarded the William Dean Howells Medal, an award given every five years to the best novel of the previous five years.

The novel was turned into a feature film in which Lana Turner co-starred.

By Love Possessed was one of Cozzens's "professional novels," whose stories presented fully developed characters and placed a special emphasis on the details of their work.

Plot

Arthur Winner Jr., an attorney in a small but unnamed American town in a time described as being roughly contemporary, is followed, in the novel, through 49 hours of his life. This is done with flashbacks to prior events that tell us more about Arthur, his acquaintances, and his community. Many of the more significant characters, including Arthur Winner Sr., the protagonist's father, are dead at the time of the novel and are only seen in these flashbacks.

Arthur Jr. is a partner in the small law firm which his father founded in partnership with Noah Tuttle. As a young man, Arthur married Noah's daughter, Hope; they had three children, two sons and a daughter. Hope had died after giving birth to their daughter. Arthur is now married to a younger woman named Clarissa, who had been his daughter's tennis coach. The law practice currently consists of Arthur, Noah, and another man named Julius Penrose. It is said that Arthur had a brief but intense affair with Marjorie Penrose, Julius' wife.

Two cases preoccupy Arthur during the course of the novel. The first concerns the probate of the estate of Michael McCarthy; the second is the arrest of Ralph Detweiler for rape. He is also called on to deal with a new pastor in the Episcopal Church, who is asking him to take a role in the leadership of the parish. He also meets with one of Marjorie's friends, a woman who wants to discuss converting to Catholicism.

Many years ago, a trolley line had been built in the town, and Noah Tuttle had encouraged such clients as Michael McCarthy to invest in it. The trolley company went bankrupt, however, due to the rise of the automobile. Noah handled the bankruptcy case and, to the amazement of all, managed to return some money to the investors. The novel, however, begins to hint at a darker side to Noah's brilliance. He ridicules an elderly woman for wanting to move some of her funds from bonds into stocks. He bristles at the suggestion that the endowment of the parish could be transferred to management by the dioceses. During a hearing which Arthur supervises, Noah has an outburst when questioned about the assets of the McCarthy estate.

Meanwhile, Ralph Detweiler, a young man, has been accused of what would now be called “date rape," and is dealing with the pregnancy of another. He flees to New York, whereupon his distraught sister Helen commits suicide. Arthur examines the records that Helen has been maintaining and discovers that Noah has been embezzling from the trusts that he managedthis was the source of the money from the bankruptcy settlement. Noah embezzled $200,000 from the "Orcutt bequest" and has since been manipulating the money in his trusts, robbing Peter to pay Paul while attempting to replenish the funds. Arthur also learns that Julius Penrose has been aware of the embezzlement for some time. But Julius urges Arthur to keep quiet, hinting that he is aware of Arthur’s affair with his wife, and that he is grateful that he has been silent about that. Arthur contemplates his position, where there are no good choices. He says, “Life, that has unfairly served so many others, at last unfairly serves me.”

Main characters

Arthur Winner – A middle-aged small town lawyer. He is the central character.

Hope Winner (deceased) - Arthur’s first wife, who died giving birth to his now teenage daughter. Arthur is troubled by the thought that his second wife is much more sexually responsive.

Clarissa Winner – Arthur’s second wife, who was his daughter’s tennis coach, considerably younger than Arthur. An extended love making passage of the two is both highly praised by some critics, and derided by others.

Arthur Winner, Senior (deceased) – Arthur’s father and (with Noah Tuttle) founder of his law firm. He is referred to as the “Man of Reason.”

Warren Winner (deceased) - Arthur’s elder son who he found ungovernable. He was expelled from boarding school for striking a teacher. The flashback scene where Arthur is told the circumstances of Warren’s death is set at a base similar to that of Guard of Honor, another of Cozzens's novels. Warren’s death, along with that of several others, was a direct result of his reckless flying in disobedience of orders. He is the reminiscent of Lieutenant Colonel Benny Carricker, one of the key characters in Guard of Honor.

Julius Penrose – Arthur’s partner. Julius’s long reflection of the nature of Catholicism (as he contemplated his wife’s conversion) was one of the more controversial passages in the book.

Controversy

By Love Possessed was an immediate commercial and critical success. It was on the The New York Times Best Seller list for 34 weeks, holding the number two position below Peyton Place and then number 1 for several months, before Anatomy of a Murder displaced it. Over 500,000 copies were initially sold. The Readers Digest Condensed version sold over 3,000,000.

Initial reviews were overwhelmingly favorable. However, there was a reaction to the book itself; the extent of the positive reviews and a Time cover story about Cozzens, "The Hermit of Lambertville." Cozzens was criticized for the denseness of his style and unrealism in conversations. He was also criticized for being an upholder of "the Establishment," and having a pessimistic view of human potential. There is little dispute about having those viewpoints. He was also criticized as a bigot.

At one point in the book, Noah refers to "Jew lawyer tricks," and another character defends the previous generation’s attitude towards Jews. Julius Penrose's extended disquisition on Catholicism, and the absurdity of Marjorie's friend named Mrs. Pratt (her explanation of "things" to Arthur) both led to charges of anti-Catholicism. There was also more than a hint of a condescending attitude towards African-Americans, represented in the Revere family, which had provided servants to only the "best families" in town for generations. The charge of anti-Semitism was the strongest, and was reinforced by the most critical article on the book appearing in Commentary. Cozzens's defenders point out that Cozzens, far from being discriminatory, had a fairly low opinion of the entire human race. They also point out that the only person he was close to was his wife, who was Jewish.

Dwight Macdonald's Commentary article, a hostile review of By Love Possessed which he titled "By Cozzens Possessed, a Review of Reviews," ignited a critical firestorm. McDonald characterized the success of By Love Possessed as "the most alarming literary news of the year." Macdonald's review has been both credited with "eviscerating" Cozzens and blamed for having ruined Cozzens's career. It is still cited as one of the high points of Macdonald's career, and one of the best examples of a damning book review. Macdonald's review did not prevent the American Academy of Arts and Letters from awarding By Love Possessed the William Dean Howells Medal in 1960, for the most prestigious work of fiction in the last five years. However, the Commentary article itself became a significant part of American literary history, as it resulted in By Love Possessed being best known to many people from Macdonald's review.

Publishing History

New York: Harcourt Brace 1957.

New York: Harcourt Brace 2nd printing for Book of the Month Club.

New York: Harcourt Brace four additional printings.

London: Longmans Green 1958

New York: Crest 1959. Paperback.

Harmondsworth: Penguin 1960. Paperback

New York: Harcourt Brace and World- Harvest paperback 1967.

Sources

Award

William Dean Howells Medal, 1960

References

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