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ward-winning
journalist and author Tom Wolfe, whose daughter Alexandra is a Duke
senior and whose book-in-progress is set on a college campus, will
deliver the 2002 commencement address on Sunday, May 12. Announcing
Wolfe's selection, President Nannerl O. Keohane cited Wolfe's "well-justified
reputation as one of the most perceptive chroniclers of American
culture."
Wolfe is the author of such acclaimed books as The Electric
Kool-Aid Acid Test (1968), The Right Stuff (1979), The
Bonfire of the Vanities (1987), and A Man in Full (1998).
Soon after the publication of A Man in Full, Wolfe reflected
on the Cameron basketball culture for Duke Magazine ("A Fan
in Full," May-June 1999).
Wolfe's first book, a collection of articles about the flamboyant
Sixties written for New York and Esquire and published in 1965 as
The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby, established
him as a leading figure in the literary experiments in nonfiction
that became known as the "New Journalism."
In 1968, he published two bestsellers on the same day: The
Pump House Gang, made up of more articles about life in the
Sixties, and The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, a nonfiction
story of the hippie era. In 1970, he published Radical Chic &
Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers, a controversial book about racial
friction in the United States.
In 1979, Wolfe completed The Right Stuff, an account of
the rocket airplane experiments of the post-World War II era and
the early space program, focusing upon the psychology of the rocket
pilots and the astronauts and the competition between them. The
book became a bestseller and won the American Book Award for nonfiction,
the National Institute of Arts and Letters Harold Vursell Award
for prose style, and the Columbia Journalism Award.
In 1984 and 1985, Wolfe wrote his first novel, The Bonfire
of the Vanities, in serial form against a deadline of every
two weeks for Rolling Stone magazine. A story of the money-feverish
1980s in New York, The Bonfire of the Vanities was published
in book form in 1987, staying at number one on The New York Times
bestseller list for two months and remaining on the list for more
than a year.
His second novel, A Man in Full, was published in November
1998. The book's protagonists are a sixty-year-old Atlanta real-estate
developer whose empire has begun a grim slide toward bankruptcy
and a twenty-three-year-old manual laborer who works in the freezer
unit of a wholesale food warehouse in Alameda County, California,
owned by the developer.
Before the story ends, both have had to face the question of what
makes a man "a man in full" at the beginning of a new
century and a new millennium. The book headed The New York Times
bestseller list for ten weeks, sold nearly 1.4 million copies in
hardcover, and landed Wolfe on the cover of Time magazine
in his trademark white suit with white homburg and white kid gloves--and
with his claim inside that the kind of detailed realism of the book
was the future of the American novel.
The New York Times once wrote that Wolfe "understands
the human animal like no sociologist around. He breaks his reader's
every buried thought and prejudice. He sees through everything."
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