". . . a sympathetic, insightful and highly readable story. . . . Gathorne-Hardy . . . shows us a very human and fallible but ultimately likable Kinsey, impatient and irritable at times, stubborn, willful, certainly a monomaniac about his research interests, whether gall wasps or human sexuality." ― New York Times Book Review
". . . revises [the] revisionism and presents Kinsey in an altogether more favorable light . . . a humane and indefatigable sex educator, as well as an unfairly maligned martyr of American priggishness. . . ." ― Salon
Gathorne-Hardy's literate, major biography of Kinsey is the first to give a balanced portrait of one of this century's pioneering researchers and social reformers. The author interviewed in depth surviving family members, close colleagues, friends, and lovers. In this subtle, often witty, penetrating book, he reveals not just a series of new revelations, but whole new aspects of this complex, difficult, contradictory, heroic, obsessive, and ultimately sympathetic man.
Excellent book - I loved learning that the film KINSEY - is based on the biography of Alfred Kinsey by Jonathan Gathorne-Hardy. Kinsey was a complex character & a brilliant scientist - and I am proud that he began his renowned sex research right here in my home town, Bloomington, Indiana. (I'm also a bit proud of the fact that his grand-daughter - Wendy Kinsey Corning is my wonderful and very caring gynecologist!)
From Publishers Weekly Beyond sex researcher Alfred Kinsey's motives—to enlighten people about sex and thereby sweep away crippling fear and ignorance about it—lay a troubled individual whose research helped him conquer his own psychological demons. In this companion book to the film on Kinsey's life currently in theaters, Kinsey biographer Gathorne-Hardy, Newsweek editor Wolfe and director/screenwriter Condon cover these facts and others with fascinating detail. Both Wolfe's biographical essay and Condon's script dramatize Kinsey's struggle with a puritanical father and his romance with graduate student Clara McMillen, who became his lifelong partner and support. Their relationship survived a difficult early sexual adjustment, as well as Kinsey's homosexual liaisons, while Kinsey's 1948 report Sexual Behavior in the Human Male made waves across the country. The book's second half is devoted to the shooting script, which offers a dramatic contrast to the precise, academic nature of Gathorne Hardy's introduction and Wolfe's essay. In a q&a, Condon talks of his affinity for portraying misfits and outsiders and his decision to adopt a classical Merchant/Ivory filmmaking approach. No biographical work—print or film—can capture all aspects of such a contradictory person, but this book certainly ranks as one of the most illuminating studies ever published about its complex, groundbreaking subject. 32 pages of color photos.
Held my interest. Kinsey was a sick, twisted man. Pedophilia was ok. Coercing people into sexual acts ok, especially if it's your wife or one of your employees or their wives.
A really long book - but fascinating from an anthropological standpoint. I saw the movie and was dying to know how much of it was true and what was creative license. Sounds like it was an interesting family to be a part of.
This was a biography of Alfred Kinsey, the sex-scientist of the 40's and 50's. We had seen a movie of his life recently. My husband,Mike, thought he was a pervert. I was more sympathetic. His own homosexuality and view of sexuality probably skewed the results of his work.
Very interesting biography of a man unafraid to be different who became obsessed with his life work. Also a very good summary of his work and the reason it was so significant for the time.
Really interesting read. The author occasionally complains about how wrong other authors have gotten Kinsey, and falls on the sympathetic side of balanced.