"The letters are hugely evocative and some of them sound as though they could have been penned by Jack Kerouac, so throatily do they capture the hobo spirit and the dispossession of an America in breakdown."
—The Daily Mirror
"American Letters: 1927-1947 shows just how varied the American dream really was (and is) for those born without the silver spoon...[it] is a great book because of the calm and humane way it reveals from the inside the struggle of ordinary, talented people to make their lives better and culturally enriched (and how we should never lost sight of that), but also because it highlights the world out of which a great artist such as Pollock was formed."
—Sunday Business Post
"Reflects the mix of bust and boom, fraught activism and disenchantment with Socialist art that American abstraction grew out of."
—The Daily Telegraph
"It would be hard to match the book as an account of this unusual family in its own varied voices, grounded in the larger struggles of the Depression, the shifting, sometimes dumbfounding politics of the Communist Left, the travails of an indispensable government arts programme, and the dilemmas of one driven artist who would take, it seemed, forever to find his way."
—Times Literary Supplement
"American Letters lets correspondence narrate two arduous decades, making us keenly aware of the way the five Pollock brothers were deeply supportive of one another during an era when mere survival wasn't always easy."
—ARTnews
"Their descriptions of current events, anxieties about employment, and their shifting (and sometimes conflicting) political views offer vivid details about the general environment in which Jackson was living and working during this period.... The letters also introduce a warmth and affection that offsets assertions by past biographers of resentful and estranged relationships within the Pollock family."
—The Art Newspaper
"Though American Letters's value is not limited to Pollock scholarship, its most profound achievement is that it provides an unabashed view of the intellect behind the work. By giving us new evidence of Jackson Pollock's own voice, American Letters achieves both, to offer an important new source for understanding his struggles and genuine search for meaning in life and art, as well as to (what Charles Pollock called) 'keep the record straight.'"
—Brooklyn Rail
"The letters with which the scattered family kept in touch across the US provide a vivid account of the lived experience of thoughtful people over two turbulent decades."
—Morning Star
"A fascinating volume that sheds light in particular on the Depression years in the US and some of the intellectual and artistic trends that emerged during that harsh era."
—World Socialist Web Site
"American Letters is no doubt intriguing for the artistically and politically inclined. Regardless of personal interests, however, the book presents five lives lived with self-reflection and cultural cognizance. The 21st century has fostered a world of expedience in which it is easy to forgo inconvenient communication. American Letters illuminates the importance of thoughtful interrelations, telling a classic American story along the way."
—The Martha's Vineyard Times
"Bears witness to the hardscrabble reality of the artist's upbringing amid boxcars and barren homesteads - the incubator of his creative vision."
—Wall Street Journal
"This extraordinary book is more than a fascinating collection of family stories - though it is surely that. It also casts unprecedented light on the young Jackson Pollock, and on the intersections between politics and the arts in mid-twentieth-century America."
—Jackson Lears, Editor, RARITAN
"Spanning the years from 1927 to 1947, these letters between members of the Pollock family, along with some notable figures from the period, bring the Depression and war years vividly to life. This book is of interest not only for scholars of Pollock, but for anyone curious about the material, social, and political realities of the Depression and war years - it is an utterly compelling chronicle of private lives and public events. We find here the soil which nourished Pollock's art, as well as a great deal more about the emotional and political grounding of this great painter."
—Angela L. Miller, Washington University in St. Louis
"These letters are extraordinary, not only because of the events to which they so pointedly bear witness or the remarkable bond they manifest between all the members of this family, scattered as they are across the US while in search of a job, but for the relentless cultural and artistic aspirations of their authors throughout times of extreme financial distress. There are moments of anger, or despair at the political situation, but overall it is a shared conviction that the world could be made a better place both by art and by political activism, or by the joining of the two, that lies at the core of this amazingly rich correspondence. This vast trove gives us a detailed picture of what it was to be an aspiring artist in poverty-stricken America during the 1930s. It should be a must-read for anyone interested in the socio-political context from which American modernism emerged."
—Yve-Alain Bois, Institute for Advanced Study, New Jersey