David D. Cooper, Editor
Thomas Merton and James Laughlin
Selected Letters
The remarkable development of Thomas Mertonmonk, poet, and social criticas documented
in nearly thirty years of correspondence with his
publisher.
Thomas Merton may have seemed an unlikely candidate for
a best-selling author. Cloistered in a remote Kentucky
monastery, Merton struggled as a young man to reconcile the
contemplative life he sought as a monk and his very public
passion for writing. Publisher James Laughlin saw Merton's talent
and played the muse, encouraging him with the poems,
essays, and diaries of other writers and publishing nearly
everything Merton sent in return.
Ironically, the very society Merton rejected upon
entering the monastery embraced his work, bringing him
publishing success only dreamed of by more eager authors. Soon
Merton discovered he had a podium, a voice, and a responsibility
that weighed as heavily on him as his previous quest for
silence. Laughlin's encouragement remained constant throughout,
as political ally, publishing adviser, and supporting friend.
Nearly thirty years of rich correspondence documents
this strong literary and personal relationship and traces the
remarkable development of Merton's vision: from an early focus
on matters internal and religious, to a tremendous world
view encompassing issues of race, politics, war, and the
spiritual decay of modern society.
David D. Cooper is a professor in the Department of
American Thought and Language at Michigan State University.
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