Book Cover

Badge Of Courage
The Life of Stephen Crane

By Linda H. Davis
Houghton Mifflin, $35
ISBN 0899199348

Buy or borrow this book!

Support your local independent bookseller

Find it in a WorldCat library

Compare prices at major online bookstores

REVIEW BY ROGER BISHOP

Stephen Crane was only 28 when he died of tuberculosis in England in 1900. He packed into that time, however, enough highs and lows, achievements and disappointments, as well as adventure, for several lives. Almost a century after his death, his best novels, The Red Badge of Courage and Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, are American classics. His short stories, "The Open Boat" and "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky," among others, are widely read and enjoyed. It confirms what Crane's friend, H.G. Wells, said at his death, "He was, beyond dispute, the best writer of our generation, and his untimely death was an irreparable loss to our literature."

Crane was a complex man of great personal charm whose work was a combination of imagination and experience. Red Badge was set during the Civil War, although Crane was not born until 1871. He drew on his work as a war correspondent in Cuba and Greece for later work including his last novel, Active Service. He was, as Linda H. Davis writes in her outstanding new biography, Badge of Courage, "a writer who was always pretending to be someone else."

Davis begins with the early influence of Crane's parents. His father, a Methodist minister, wrote ten pages a day, primarily, it seems, to impress his children with the importance of writing. His mother, who bore 14 children, was a social activist and the author of several published short works.

During his brief period as a college student, Stephen began to write seriously and left school to become a newspaper reporter. In 1895 he explained to Willa Cather "that he led a double literary life; writing in the first place the matter that pleased himself and doing it very slowly; in the second place, any sort of stuff that would sell." It was a pattern he would follow all his writing life. Although he lived modestly, even in virtual poverty at times, he seems to never have been free of debt.

Crane was sensitive to the plight of others. "His sympathies," as novelist and war correspondent "were with the wounded and the private soldier." His defense of a prostitute wrongly arrested cost him the friendship of Police Commissioner Theodore Roosevelt. At the same time, he "did not write or talk about his feelings for Cora [the bordello madam who lived with him as his wife] yet friends described him as devoted and protective of her." Cora was devoted to him as well.

Of particular interest are Crane's relationships with other writers. In the United States, these included Hamlin Garland and William Dean Howells. Later, in England, they were H.G. Wells, Ford Maddox Hueffer (last name later changed to Ford), Henry James, and, most importantly, Joseph Conrad.

Because of his tuberculosis, Crane was convinced that he would die young. Davis speculates that "he lived and worked on the ragged edge because he knew he hadn't much time." Drawing on the latest Crane scholarship, Davis captures this aspect of his life and work. Her book is beautifully done.

Roger Bishop is a monthly contributor to BookPage.


© 1998 ProMotion, inc.
www@bookpage.com