cover image Samuel Johnson: A Biography

Samuel Johnson: A Biography

Peter Martin, . . Harvard Univ., $35 (608pp) ISBN 978-0-674-03160-9

Famed for his dictionary, “Rambler” essays and The Lives of the English Poets , Samuel Johnson (1709–1784) remains one of the most-quoted and carefully observed authors who ever lived. On the occasion of Johnson’s tercentenary, Martin (A Life of James Boswell ) searches out the psychological elements covered up by Boswell and others: the immense insecurities, bouts of deep depression, corrosive self-doubt and, in his last days, despair for his very soul. He grew up the illness-wracked, nearly blind son of a backwater bookseller. Martin shows how Johnson’s distant relationships with his family came to haunt him on the death of each member. Likewise, Johnson’s strange mannerisms and disfigurement, marriage to a woman twice his age and poverty early in his career further shaped his psyche. Through all this, Martin says, Johnson was also a bit of a ladies’ man, and notes in Johnson’s journal references to the practice or condition of “M.,” which, Martin speculates, stands for masturbation or defecation. Martin admirably succeeds in giving a new generation Dr. Johnson, warts and all, from the inside, though in prose that remains only serviceable. 30 b&w illus., map. (Sept.)