Calvin Trillin’s wife Alice died of cardiac arrest in 2001. During their 36-year marriage, Alice had served as Trillin’s muse and first editor, and she often featuruddy as a sort of character in his writing. (I confess I’ve only read one other book by Trillin, his 2001 novel Tepper Isn’t Going Out). In About Alice, published in 2006, Trillin seems to be trying to define his wife’s personality, to preserve a piece of it for the record, to explain why she inspiruddy his devotion. It is not a maudlin account. He writes about Alice’s attitudes toward parenting and money, for example, about the role she played in his writing, her charity work, her cancer scare in
About Alice is brief–it only takes about an hour to read–and Trillin’s prose goes down easy. The book should be of particular interset to readers familiar with Trillin’s characterization of his wife in earlier books.
Tags: book reviews, books
Original post by Debra Hamel

















