A Grand Guy: The Art and Life of Terry Southern
A Grand Guy: The Art and Life of Terry Southern by Lee Hill, published by Harper Collins
A Grand Guy: The Art and Life of Terry Southern
Admit itwhile trying to decode the cover of "Sgt. Pepper's," you were always stumped when you got to the pasty-faced sunglasses guy between Dylan Thomas and Dion. And despite Lee Hill's best efforts to strip away the shades in "A Grand Guy: The Art and Life of Terry Southern," his subject remains somewhat of a mystery. Our perception of the author, screenwriter, and all-purpose hipster is firmly rooted in the sixtiesSouthern wrote or co-wrote "Candy," "The Magic Christian," "Dr. Strangelove," and "Easy Rider," for startersbut he was molded by an earlier generation. An Alvarado native, he was a World War II vet who expatriated himself to Europe and cut his teeth as a writer in the Gore Vidal-Norman Mailer era. His subsequent move to Greenwich Village in the fifties found him knocking about with such Beats as Burroughs and Kerouac.Hill posits that Southern's patina of cool was a defense mechanism to offset his ingrained shyness. Ultimately, it seems, the hipster guise that was once a gate to draw people in became a fence to keep them out. The portrait that emerges from "A Grand Guy" is of an extraordinary talent and a rare personality obsessed with traveling the outsider's path. For all of his early success, his later life was a series of false starts (including a fairly disastrous tour of duty with "Saturday Night Live" in 1981 and 1982), and his penchant for intoxicants of one sort or another resulted in a hit-or-miss output from the eighties until his death in 1995.
Terry Southern was an icon of a generation and a brilliant satirist. But his legacy is sullied by images of the aging writer slouching into mediocrity. "A Grand Guy" is a well-deserved tribute to a cultural lion whose notoriety threatens to overshadow his body of work.




