Herbert Gold Explained

Herbert Gold
Birth Date:9 March 1924
Birth Place:Lakewood, Ohio, U.S.
Death Place:San Francisco, California, U.S.
Education:Sorbonne
Alma Mater:Columbia University (AB, AM)
Spouse:
    Children:5, including Ari Gold

    Herbert Gold (March 9, 1924 – November 19, 2023) was an American novelist.

    Early life

    Herbert Gold was born on March 9, 1924, in the Cleveland suburb of Lakewood, Ohio, to a Russian Jewish family.[1] [2] [3] His parents were Samuel S. and Frieda (Frankel) Gold. His father ran a fruit store and later a grocery store.[4] Gold memorialized his hometown in his first book, Birth of a Hero (1951). He attended Taft Elementary and Lakewood High School.[5] [6]

    Gold moved to New York City at age 17 after several of his poems had been accepted by New York literary magazines. While there, he studied philosophy at Columbia University and became affiliated with the burgeoning Beat Generation, which resulted in a lifelong friendship with writer Allen Ginsberg. His studies were interrupted when he served in the United States Army from 1943 until 1946, during World War II.

    In 1946, Gold graduated from Columbia University with a B.A. degree, and M.A. degree in 1948.

    Despite being intertwined with the literary history of San Francisco which greatly defined the Beat Generation, Gold did not consider himself to have ever been a member of this group of writers. In a 2017 interview with Washington Post journalist Jeff Weiss, Gold was referred to as a "Beat-adjacent novelist."

    Career

    Gold won a Fulbright Scholarship (1948–1951) and moved to Paris with his new wife Edith Zubrin, and while in Paris he finished his first novel. He attended classes at the Sorbonne in Paris during his Fulbright Scholarship.[1]

    After that, he moved around as he wrote, traveling to Haiti and Detroit, and hitchhiking all over the United States. He finally settled in San Francisco, where he became a fixture in the literary scene. In 1958 Gold taught English literature at Cornell University, as Vladimir Nabokov's successor.

    Genesis West (Vol. 6), was published in the Winter of 1964 with an interview of Herbert Gold by Gordon Lish.

    Gold's final publication, the poetry collection Fathers Verses Sons: A Correspondence in Poems, co-written with Ari Gold, is forthcoming from Rare Bird Books in March 2024.[7]

    Personal life

    Gold was married to writer and professor Edith Zubrin from 1948 until 1956, ending in divorce.[8] [9] From this marriage Gold is father of daughters Ann Gold and Judith Gold. Edith Zubrin died in 2000.

    Gold was married to the daughter of J. Richardson Dilworth, Melissa Dilworth, from 1968 until 1975, with whom he had three children: daughter Nina Gold and twin boys Ari Gold and Ethan Gold.[10] After they divorced, Melissa married again, and she later became involved with concert promoter Bill Graham. She died with Graham in a helicopter crash in 1991.

    In contrast to many in the Beat Generation, Gold was a resident of San Francisco's more conservative, tourist-friendly Russian Hill neighborhood, where he lived in the same apartment for over 60 years.[11] [12] He died there on November 19, 2023, at the age of 99.[1]

    Publications

    Books

    Essays and short stories

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. News: Herbert Gold, Novelist Who Dissected Love and Marriage, Dies at 99. Grimes. William. November 20, 2023. November 20, 2023. limited. The New York Times.
    2. Web site: Herbert Gold Biography. April 19, 2021. Ohio Reading Road Trip.
    3. Web site: Teicholz. Tom. August 17, 2008. THE IMMORTAL MR. GOLD. April 19, 2021. Jewish Journal. en-US.
    4. Robert Kaiser: Carnival and Chaos: An Interview with Herbert Gold. In: The Paris Review, May 31, 2018.
    5. Web site: McFerrin. Linda Watanabe. November 17, 2015. Literary Salon: Herbert Gold, Author of When a Psychopath Falls in Love. April 19, 2021. Left Coast Writers. en-US.
    6. Web site: Herbert Gold papers, 1951-1984. April 19, 2021. Columbia University Libraries Archive Collection, Columbia University.
    7. https://www.amazon.com/Father-Verses-Sons-Correspondence-Poems/dp/164428426X Retrieved 20 March 2024.
    8. Herbert Gold. In: Joel Shatzky, Michael Taub: Contemporary Jewish-American Novelists: A Bio-critical Sourcebook. Greenwood Press, 1997,, p. 116 ff.
    9. News: February 12, 2000. UIC Professor Edith Zubrin Harnett. Chicago Tribune. April 19, 2021.
    10. News: October 28, 1991. Melissa Gold, 47, Aide For California Causes. en-US. The New York Times. April 19, 2021. 0362-4331.
    11. News: The Beat Generation. Jeff. Weiss. Washington Post. June 30, 2017. December 5, 2021.
    12. News: Catching Up With Five Surviving Members Of the Beat Generation In Northern California. SFist. July 5, 2021. December 5, 2021. December 5, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20211205215451/https://sfist.com/2017/07/05/catching_up_with_five_surviving_mem/. dead.
    13. News: Gold. Herbert. May 22, 1977. Waiting For Cordelia. en-US. Washington Post. limited. April 19, 2021. 0190-8286.
    14. https://www.amazon.com/Father-Verses-Sons-Correspondence-Poems/dp/164428426X Retrieved March 20, 2024.
    15. Web site: Adams. Robert Martin. Summer 1960. Book Review: The Short Stories of Herbert Gold. April 19, 2021. The Hudson Review. en-US.