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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- When senior writer Paul Gray sat down with Scott Turow in
- his law office in Chicago's Sears Tower, Gray found the
- best-selling novelist friendly but also rather circumspect. "He
- is, after all, an attorney," says Gray. "He measures his words
- carefully." But when the venue shifted to the comfortable
- writing den in Turow's home, half-an-hour's train ride away,
- conversation loosened up. "When we talked about literature, the
- enthusiasm bubbled up," says Gray. "Turow gets extremely
- animated when he talks about writers. It was like a college
- session, with two instructors getting together over a beer."
-
- That's not surprising. In a previous, low-salaried
- incarnation, Turow taught creative writing at Stanford
- University. Gray, who earned a Ph.D. in English from the
- University of Virginia, taught courses in 20th century fiction
- at Princeton University for seven years before joining TIME in
- 1972. "We found that we shared an annoyance at the academic
- approach to literature, and that we've read almost all the same
- books over the past 20 years." Gray adds with a self-deprecating
- grin, "Turow's reading tastes are impeccable."
-
- Turow is the 92nd writer to appear on the cover of TIME. The
- first was novelist Joseph Conrad in the magazine's sixth issue,
- in 1923. Eight have appeared twice: George Bernard Shaw (1923
- and 1956), Sinclair Lewis (1927 and 1945), James Joyce (1934
- and 1939), Ernest Hemingway (1937 and 1954), Andre Malraux
- (1938 and 1955), William Faulkner (1939 and 1964), Aleksandr
- Solzhenitsyn (1968 and 1974) and John Updike (1968 and 1982).
- Eugene O'Neill appeared four times (1924, 1928, 1931 and 1946).
- Other writers include Russell Baker, John Cheever, Noel Coward,
- Graham Greene, Alex Haley, John Irving, Jean Kerr, Stephen
- King, John le Carre, Norman Mailer, Mario Puzo, J.D. Salinger,
- Neil Simon, Gore Vidal, Rebecca West, Tennessee Williams and
- Herman Wouk.
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- Gray has been impressed by Turow's two novels, the first of
- which, Presumed Innocent, he reviewed for TIME three years ago.
- "I'm glad Turow's books have been added to the reading mix,"
- says Gray, who besides being a book reviewer has been the
- principal writer of the new Grapevine section. "He's interested
- in putting plot and suspense back into fiction."
-
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- -- Louis A. Weil III
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