Hedrick examines London's inner life, primarily as it is revealed
in his art, to discover the man concealed beneath the public
persona. Although London was wealthy, famous, and one of the last
great self-made men in America, Hedrick shows that he was always
torn by his troubled relationship to his lower-class origins. He
lived in painful awareness of the contradictions between the man's
world of the lower classes--at the workplace, on the road, and in
prison--and the woman's world of the middle class in which he took
refuge.
Originally published 1982.
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