Young Hearts Crying
AuthorRichard Yates
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
PublisherDelacorte Press
Publication date
1984
Preceded byLiars in Love 
Followed byCold Spring Harbor 

Young Hearts Crying is the penultimate novel of American writer Richard Yates.

The novel tells the story of struggling poet and artist Michael Davenport, who spurns his heiress wife's offer of financial assistance, choosing instead to make abortive attempts at achieving artistic success on his own terms.[1] The novel, Yates' first in over six years, was generally well received, with Associated Press book reviewer Phil Thomas calling it "absorbing" and "superb"[1] and New York Times reviewer Christopher Lehmann-Haupt terming the work "absorbing" and "beguilingly vivid" despite complaining that characters' lack of self-awareness became "ultimately tiresome."[2]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Phil Thomas (Associated Press). "Novel is 'superb'," Roswell Daily Record (Roswell, NM), December 31, 1984, page 11.
  2. Christopher Lehmann-Haupt. "Richard Yates' novel vivid but irksome," Pacific Stars and Stripes (Tokyo, Japan; reprinted from The New York Times), February 3, 1985, page 16, "Pacific Sunday" section.


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