📘 Eugene O'Neill's Creative Struggles will become one of the handful of standard studies of O'Neill's life and work. --- Frederick C. Wilkins, Editor, The Eugene O'Neill Review "A unique and extremely valuable work. Reading this book is also a delightful experience---the imaginative quality of the scholarship is dazzling." ---William J. Fisher, Rutgers UniversityIn Eugene O'Neill's Creative Struggle, Doris Alexander gives us a new kind of inside biography that begins where the others leave off. It follows O'Neill through the door into his writing room to give a blow-by-blow account of how he fought out in his plays his great life battles--- love against hate, doubt against belief, life against death--- to an ever-expanding understanding. It presents a new kinds of criticism, showing how O'Neill's most intimate struggles worked their way to resolution through the drama of his plays. Alexander reveals that he was engineering his own consciousness through his plays and solving his life problems--- while the tone, imagery, and richness of the plays all came out of the nexus of memories summoned up by the urgency of the problems he faced in them. By the way of O'Neill, this study moves toward a theory of the impulse that sets off a writer's creativity, and a theory of how that impulse acts to shape a work, not only in a dramatist like O'Neill but also in the case of writers in other meduims, and even of painters and compose...