![]() ![]() ![]() “He was concerned that I would never be able to make a living at this kind of thing,” Connell, in a 2000 interview with the Associated Press, said of writing. This did not please his father, whom Connell described as “a rather severe man.” He was a pre-med student at Dartmouth, which he attended from 1941 to 1943, but ultimately decided against following in his elders’ footsteps. 17, 1924, Connell was the son and grandson of physicians. Like much of his other fiction, it was semi-autobiographical, set in Connell’s hometown. Wallace Stegner pronounced it “a hell of a portrait.” Bridge,” the story of a lonely and conventional Kansas City, Mo., housewife whose material wealth conceals a life of quiet desperation. Making his debut as a novelist in the same time period as Philip Roth and John Updike, Connell earned comparisons to those writers with “Mrs. ![]()
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