Stein, Gertrude
The Subterraneans
(Kerouac)
Superworm
(Deaux)
Suthon, Marcia
Swift, Jonathan
Taliaferro, Kent
Ted (Southwestern Louisiana Institute student)
TeleKids
(television show)
The Ten Commandments
(film)
Tindall, William
Tomorrow Show
Toole, Harold, Jr.
Toole, John Dewey, Jr. (father)
background and work of
and Columbia contribution
and de Russy
death of
as “downtown” person in Uptown
estate of
and Kubach
and marital problems
mental illness of
and money
physical decline of
and Polites visit
and relationship with son
and shingles
and son at Southwestern Louisiana Institute
and son in high school
and son's birth
and son's study of engineering at Tulane
and son's suicide
Toole, John Kennedy
and acting and theater
and alcohol
ancestors of
in army in Puerto Rico
arrogance and superciliousness of
and automobiles
and banter
and Beats
bigotry of
birth of
brilliance and intelligence of
and British literature
and character and dialogue
at Columbia University
comical energy of
and comics and cartoons
complexity of
curiosity of
and dancing
“dark streak” in
depression, remoteness, detachment, and distance of
devotion to mother of
and dialect
drive to achieve greatness of
and east coast trip (1954)
and ego and insecurity
and exaggeration
and father's mental illness
and females in literature and life
final journey of
forms of name used by
and frustrations and disappointments as writer
and girls and women
and Haspel Brothers job
in high school
and homosexuality
humor and wit of
at Hunter College (
See
Hunter College: and Toole)
and impersonations and mimicking
and Kennedy assassination
in kindergarten and grade school
and liberalism and political sensibilities
and literary criticism
literary influences on
master's thesis of
mental illness of
and Mississippi visit (1954)
and money
and Monroe
and Morter suicide attempt
and mother's musical talents
and mother's stifling, dominance, protectiveness, and narcissism
narrative voice in letters of
nervous breakdown of
and New Orleans' attraction and fascination
and New York City's attraction, fascination, and repellency
and observations of people
as one hit wonder
and other biographies
Papers at Tulane of
paranoia of
and patriotism and government
and philosophy and pragmatism
poetry of
and pranks
relationship with father
and religion
return to New Orleans and life with parents
and rock and roll
and satire
scholarship fund at Tulane
sense of superiority of
and sixteenth-century literature
and “sketches,”
at Southwestern Louisiana Institute (SLI)
at St. Mary's Dominican College
and storytelling and narrative
suicide of
and teaching style and students
and television
at Tulane University
turn toward becoming novelist of
and University of Washington
upbringing of
and Waugh
weight and physique of
and women in society
and Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship
See also A Confederacy of Dunces
(Toole);
The Neon Bible
(Toole)
Toole, Thelma (mother)
and abandoned biography and collection of academic papers of son
anti-Semitism of
background and work of
and bedtime stories
and Bianciardi
and brother Arthur
and Brynner tale
and Christmas 1967
and
A Confederacy of Dunces
coveting of relationship with son
death of
as “downtown” person in Uptown
and fight with son (January 1969)
and Foote
and Guibet
and Harvard
and husband's death
and husband's mental illness
and husband's relationship with son
and husband's shingles
and Jean François Ducoing
and Laird
and letter writers, visitors, and gifts
and marital problems
and money
and Monroe
and Morter suicide attempt
and move to Cambronne Street
musical talents of
and
The Neon Bible
and other biographies
physical decline of
and Polites visit and piano playing
publicity, spotlight, and accolades for
and relatives' mental illnesses
and religion
and schools in New Orleans
sense of superiority and delusions of grandeur of
and son at Columbia
and son at Tulane
and son's acting and theater
and son's birth
and son's brilliance, superiority, and greatness
and son's dating
and son's early childhood
and son's final journey
and son's memorabilia, relics, collection of books, papers, letters, etc.
and son's mental illness
and son's perceptiveness and observations
and son's poetry
and son's portrayal and legacy
and son's return to New Orleans
and son's sharing of writing attempts
and son's suicide
and son's weight and physique
and son's writing style
superciliousness of
and Toole family
and World War II
Traveling Theatre Troupers
Tree of Liberty
(novel)
Treen, David
Trilling, Diana
Trilling, Lionel
Troilus and Cressida
Truman, Harry
Tulane University.
See
Toole, John Kennedy: at Tulane University
Ulysses
(Joyce)
Ussery, Huling
Valley of the Dolls
Van Doren, Mark
Variety
Vespa, Mary
Vietnam
Wagner, Dick
Waugh, Evelyn
as influence
and Monroe
racist remarks of
Wechsler, James
West, Mae
Wieler, John
Williams, Tennessee
Wonk, Dalt
Wordsworth, Dorothy
World War II
Yardley, Jonathan
Young, Bob
Zelden, Joel
Ziegler, Lottie
Copyright © 2012 by Cory MacLauchlin
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
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MacLauchlin, Cory.
Butterfly in the typewriter : the tragic life of John Kennedy Toole and the
remarkable story of A confederacy of dunces / Cory MacLauchlin.
p. cm.
eISBN : 978-0-306-82104-2
1. Toole, John Kennedy, 1937â1969. Confederacy of dunces.
2. Novelists, American--20th century--Biography. I. Title.
PS3570.O54C666 2012
813'.54âdc23
2012000259
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First Da Capo Press edition 2012
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