Peter Matthiessen
Peter Matthiessen (May 22, 1927 – April 5, 2014) was an American novelist, naturalist, explorer, and Zen Buddhist priest whose writings chronicled expeditions into remote wilderness areas and intertwined observations of ecology, indigenous cultures, and spiritual inquiry.[1][2] Matthiessen co-founded The Paris Review in 1953 while working undercover as a CIA operative in Paris, a role he later acknowledged served patriotic aims during the early Cold War but which he abandoned upon returning to the United States.[3][4] His nonfiction masterpiece The Snow Leopard (1978), recounting a 1973 trek through the Himalayas in search of the elusive snow leopard alongside biologist George Schaller, earned the National Book Award for Contemporary Thought in 1980 and remains a seminal work blending travelogue, natural history, and personal bereavement following his wife's death from cancer.[2][5] In fiction, Matthiessen achieved rare distinction as the only author to win the National Book Award in both categories, receiving it for the revised trilogy Shadow Country (2008), a historical novel drawn from the life of Florida outlaw Edgar Watson that delved into themes of violence, environment, and human ambition in the Everglades.[2] Throughout his career, spanning over three dozen books, Matthiessen advocated for environmental conservation and Native American rights, often drawing from firsthand fieldwork that exposed him to endangered species and marginalized communities, though his engagements occasionally sparked legal disputes, such as libel suits over depictions in In the Spirit of Crazy Horse (1983).[5][1]Early life and education
Birth and family background
Peter Matthiessen was born on May 22, 1927, in Manhattan, New York City.[1][6] He was the second of three children born to Erard Adolph Matthiessen, an architect, and Elizabeth Matthiessen (née Carey).[1][6] The Matthiessen family traced its roots to Scandinavian whalers from Friesland, with one ancestor referenced in Herman Melville's Moby-Dick.[1][7] Erard Matthiessen established a successful architectural practice in New York, providing the family with an affluent upbringing in a residence overlooking Central Park.[6] During World War II, Erard served in the U.S. Navy, reflecting the family's patriotic engagements amid broader national events.[6]Schooling and early influences
Matthiessen attended St. Bernard's School in Manhattan during his early years, followed by Greenwich Country Day School in Connecticut.[1] He later enrolled at the Hotchkiss School in Lakeville, Connecticut, a prestigious preparatory institution where he graduated despite a reputation as a less-than-model student prone to disciplinary issues.[8] [1] Following his graduation from Hotchkiss in 1945, Matthiessen briefly served in the U.S. Navy until 1947, stationed in Hawaii.[9] He then pursued higher education at Yale University, earning a bachelor's degree in English in 1950; during his junior year, he studied at the Sorbonne in Paris.[10] [9] At Yale, he supplemented his English major with courses in biology and ornithology, which aligned with his budding interests.[11] Matthiessen's early influences stemmed from his privileged upbringing in a family tied to nature conservation; his father, an architect, served as a spokesman for the Audubon Society, exposing him to ornithology and environmental awareness from childhood.[12] Time spent in rural New York and Connecticut during his youth further nurtured a lifelong affinity for wilderness and wildlife observation, evident in his later naturalist writings.[13] These experiences, combined with academic pursuits in literature and science, prompted him to begin writing short stories while in college, laying the groundwork for his literary career.[11]Involvement with The Paris Review and CIA
Founding and role at The Paris Review
In 1951, Peter Matthiessen and Harold L. "Doc" Humes began conceiving The Paris Review during conversations in Paris, aiming to create a literary quarterly focused on new fiction and poetry amid the expatriate scene.[14] The magazine was formally established in Spring 1953 by Matthiessen, Humes, and George Plimpton, with its inaugural issue featuring works from emerging writers and emphasizing unpretentious literary discovery over ideological manifestos.[14] [15] Plimpton assumed the role of editor, handling much of the administrative and fundraising duties, while Matthiessen served as the initial fiction editor, selecting stories and contributing his own short fiction, "The Solver," to the first issue.[15] [16] Matthiessen's editorial approach prioritized raw talent and narrative craft, helping establish The Paris Review's reputation for spotlighting voices like those of Philip Roth and Jack Kerouac in early volumes, without the heavy critical apparatus common in contemporaneous outlets.[14] He remained involved intermittently over six decades, advising on content and participating in its cultural legacy, though his primary commitments shifted toward writing and expeditions by the late 1950s.[15] The magazine's founding in Paris reflected the post-World War II American literary diaspora, funded initially through personal networks and small grants, sustaining operations on a shoestring budget that Matthiessen and Plimpton navigated via transatlantic connections.[14] This foundational period cemented The Paris Review as a venue for apolitical modernism, contrasting with the era's politicized journals.[17]Recruitment and operations with the CIA
Matthiessen was recruited into the Central Intelligence Agency shortly after graduating from Yale University in 1950 by Professor Norman Holmes Pearson, an OSS veteran and Yale English professor who served as an early CIA intelligence officer.[4] This recruitment occurred amid the agency's expansion during the early Cold War, targeting Ivy League graduates with literary interests for cultural intelligence roles.[18] Matthiessen, then in his early twenties, viewed the position as an opportunity for a funded stay in Paris to pursue writing, later describing it as a "patriotic" endeavor without anticipating its ethical implications.[18] From 1952 to 1953, Matthiessen operated undercover in Paris, conducting surveillance within left-wing intellectual and expatriate circles to monitor potential communist influences amid heightened U.S. concerns over Soviet cultural propaganda.[19] His cover involved literary activities, including the founding of The Paris Review in 1953 alongside George Plimpton and Harold L. Humes; he pitched the quarterly literary magazine to them explicitly as a mechanism to mask his agency duties and avoid suspicion in bohemian networks.[19] Funding for the venture included $1,000 channeled through CIA-linked patron Julius Fleischmann prior to the first issue, with Matthiessen later proposing an additional $20,000 in 1953–1954 to sustain operations, suggesting ongoing agency support for the publication as a propaganda adjunct.[4] The Paris Review facilitated indirect CIA objectives by commissioning author interviews that were syndicated to CIA-backed outlets, such as those affiliated with the Congress for Cultural Freedom, including magazines in Germany and Japan, thereby disseminating Western literary narratives to counter Eastern Bloc ideologies.[18] Matthiessen completed his debut novel, Partisans, during this period while balancing espionage tasks, though specific operational targets beyond general surveillance remain undocumented in declassified materials.[19] By 1953, growing disillusionment with the agency's methods—particularly its infiltration of leftist groups he increasingly sympathized with—prompted his resignation; he returned to the United States in 1954, severing formal ties.[18] His involvement surfaced publicly in the late 1970s via The New York Times, with Matthiessen confirming the details but denying any content manipulation in the magazine.[19]Literary career
Early publications and style development
Matthiessen published his debut novel, Race Rock, in 1954 through Random House, at the age of 27. The work, drawing on autobiographical elements of youthful alienation and maritime adventure, centers on a protagonist navigating personal turmoil amid a sailing race and interpersonal conflicts. Critics noted its suggestive prose and dramatic tension, though some observed an overwrought quality in its metaphors and structure typical of an emerging author.[20][21] His second novel, Partisans, followed in 1955 with Viking Press, portraying an American journalist's perilous chase of a fugitive Communist figure through postwar Paris. Praised for its intellectual rigor and suspenseful psychological probing of identity and ideology, the book reflected Matthiessen's expatriate experiences and engagement with European political undercurrents.[22][23] These initial fictions emerged from Matthiessen's pre-publication efforts, including short stories composed during his Yale years—influenced by readings of Steinbeck and Faulkner—and honed amid the modernist milieu of 1950s Paris, where he co-edited The Paris Review. Early reviews highlighted a raw, Hemingway-esque realism in dialogue and action, prioritizing terse observation over ornate lyricism, though Matthiessen later discarded one unfinished novel for insufficient depth.[24][11] By the early 1960s, with Raditzer (1961), Matthiessen's style began integrating naturalist precision from his concurrent wildlife journalism, shifting from urban psychological thrillers toward broader explorations of human frailty against wild or remote backdrops—a foundation for his mature blend of adventure narrative and existential inquiry. This evolution stemmed from firsthand expeditions and editorial feedback, evident in the controlled intensity of his prose, which avoided sentimentality while probing causal links between environment and character.[10]Major fiction works
Matthiessen published his debut novel, Race Rock, in 1954, followed by Partisans in 1955 and Raditzer in 1961, establishing his early style influenced by maritime and adventure themes.[25] These works drew from personal experiences at sea and explorations, blending realism with introspective narratives, though they received modest critical attention compared to his later output.[26] His breakthrough fiction came with At Play in the Fields of the Lord (1965), set in the Peruvian Amazon near the source of the river, depicting the clash between evangelical missionaries, mercenaries, and indigenous Niaruna tribes amid cultural encroachment and spiritual quests.[27] The novel explores themes of cultural genocide, primitive isolation, and the futility of imposed salvation, nominated for the National Book Award.[28] Critics praised its Conradian depth and vivid portrayal of jungle malevolence, though some noted its dense, adventure-driven structure.[29] Far Tortuga (1975) marked a stylistic evolution, chronicling a perilous turtle-fishing voyage off Nicaragua aboard the decaying schooner Lillias Eden, with a multinational crew facing storms, superstitions, and environmental decline.[30] Matthiessen employed experimental typography, dialect-heavy dialogue, and minimal narration to evoke oral traditions and the sea's immediacy, drawing from his own Central American expeditions.[31] The work critiques nationalism, paranoia, and overexploitation of marine resources, earning acclaim as a modernist sea epic despite its challenging form.[32] Matthiessen's Watson trilogy—Killing Mr. Watson (1990), Lost Man's River (1997), and Bone by Bone (1999)—reimagined the life of Edgar J. Watson, a historical Florida outlaw, through multiple perspectives on violence, frontier myths, and ecological transformation in the Everglades.[25] Condensed and revised as Shadow Country in 2008, this one-volume edition won the National Book Award for Fiction, lauded for its gripping revisionism and stylistic range in dissecting American individualism and moral ambiguity.[33] The project, spanning over a decade of research, integrated historical records with fictional invention to probe causal chains of betrayal and retribution in isolated communities.[34]Nonfiction expeditions and themes
Matthiessen's nonfiction expeditions emphasized direct observation of endangered ecosystems and wildlife, often in collaboration with scientists or photographers, while highlighting the encroachment of human activity on pristine habitats. His accounts integrated detailed natural history with critiques of poaching, habitat loss, and colonial legacies, underscoring the fragility of biodiversity. These works, spanning continents from the 1950s to the 1990s, reflected a commitment to documenting vanishing wilderness before irreversible decline.[35][36] In The Cloud Forest (1961), Matthiessen chronicled a 20,000-mile traverse of South American wilderness, departing from Brooklyn on November 20, 1959, aboard the M.V. Venimos bound for Iquitos, Peru, and extending through the Amazon rainforests, Andean highlands to Machu Picchu, and southward to Tierra del Fuego. The narrative captured encounters with indigenous groups and diverse fauna, including jaguars and spectacled bears, while noting early signs of deforestation and exploitation. Themes of isolation and ecological interconnectedness emerged, portraying the continent's "cloud forests" as repositories of ancient biodiversity under threat from logging and settlement.[24][37] Subsequent African expeditions formed a core of his oeuvre, beginning with The Tree Where Man Was Born (1968), based on travels in Kenya and Tanzania during the 1960s, which explored Maasai interactions with savanna ecosystems amid post-colonial changes. Sand Rivers (1981) detailed a 1979 safari into Tanzania's Selous Game Reserve, one of Africa's largest protected areas, undertaken with photographer Hugo van Lawick; the journey covered remote riverine terrains teeming with lions, elephants, and buffalo, emphasizing the reserve's status as a "last wilderness" imperiled by poaching syndicates. Building on these, African Silences (1991) synthesized multiple 1980s trips totaling 7,000 miles from Kenya through the Congo Basin to Gabon, focusing on forest elephants and mountain gorillas; Matthiessen documented poacher incursions and habitat fragmentation, attributing declines to ivory trade and logging, with stark observations of "silences" where animal choruses had faded.[38][39][40] The 1973 Himalayan expedition, recounted in The Snow Leopard (1978), marked a pivotal fusion of scientific and introspective elements: Matthiessen joined zoologist George Schaller on a 250-mile trek into Nepal's Dolpo region near the Tibetan border to study bharal (Himalayan blue sheep), enduring high-altitude hardships in pursuit of the elusive snow leopard, which symbolized unattainable purity. Though no leopard was sighted, the account wove faunal inventories—ibex, wolves, and endemic birds—with geological and ethnological notes on Bön and Buddhist highlanders, critiquing modernization's erosion of traditional lifeways. Recurring themes across these expeditions included the moral imperative of conservation, the hubris of technological expansion, and wildlife's role in human spiritual reckoning, often drawing on Matthiessen's Zen practice to frame nature as a mirror for self-examination rather than mere resource. Later works like Tigers in the Snow (2000) extended this to Siberian taiga surveys of Amur tigers, reinforcing patterns of advocacy against habitat loss and illegal hunting.[36][41][42]Spiritual and philosophical pursuits
Engagement with Zen Buddhism
Matthiessen was introduced to Zen Buddhism in the late 1960s through his second wife, Deborah Love, who had begun practicing before her death from cancer in 1972.[43] [44] He commenced formal study in 1976, initially under Eido Shimano Roshi, before training with Taizan Maezumi Roshi in Los Angeles and later Bernie Glassman Roshi.[45] His early engagement involved koan study, where he progressed through 13 of 14 checkpoints but struggled with the final requirement to manifest the inexpressible essence of a koan.[46] In 1978, Matthiessen joined the board of the Zen Community of New York (later Greyston Mandala), contributing to its development as a center blending Zen practice with social action.[45] He received priest ordination (tokudo) in 1981 from Maezumi Roshi during a three-month intensive at Greyston, becoming the community's first senior priest.[45] Matthiessen documented his practice in journals spanning 1969 to 1982, published as Nine-Headed Dragon River in 1986, which chronicles personal challenges, lineage history from India to Japan, and a 1981 pilgrimage to Japan with a Soto Zen teacher.[44] [47] As a dharma successor to Glassman, Matthiessen received inka (mind seal, conferring roshi status) in January 1997 and participated in the Zen Peacemaker Order's Bearing Witness retreats, including the inaugural one at Auschwitz in 1996, emphasizing engaged Zen amid sites of historical suffering.[45] His practice drew from the Harada-Yasutani lineage via Maezumi and Glassman, incorporating elements of Soto and Rinzai traditions, and extended to expeditions like the 1973 Himalayan journey that deepened his immersion.[45] [44] Matthiessen's Zen engagement prioritized direct perception of the present moment over conceptual analysis, viewing it as accessible to practitioners of any faith.[46]Integration of spirituality into life and writing
Matthiessen's engagement with Zen Buddhism profoundly shaped his daily existence, beginning with formal studies in 1969 under teachers including Nakagawa Soen Roshi and Eido Shimano Roshi, followed by training with Taizan Maezumi Roshi.[48] He received dharma transmission from Bernard Glassman in 1989, earning the title of roshi and assuming the dharma name Muryo, which authorized him to teach and lead meditation practices.[49] [48] On his Sag Harbor property, he converted an old horse barn into a zendo for sesshins and retreats, integrating contemplative discipline into his routine alongside writing and naturalist pursuits.[50] This commitment extended to founding initiatives like the Zen Peacemakers, where spiritual practice merged with social engagement, reflecting his view of enlightenment as inseparable from ethical action in the world.[45] In his literary output, Matthiessen regarded Zen as a tool to sharpen perception and inhabit the present moment, equating the discipline of meditation with the clarity demanded by prose.[46] He articulated this in discussions where writing emerged as an extension of zazen, fostering a "freshening of the mind" to observe phenomena without preconception, much like Buddhist insight into impermanence and interdependence.[51] Nonfiction works such as The Snow Leopard (1978) exemplify this fusion, chronicling a 1973 Himalayan expedition ostensibly for wildlife observation but interwoven with reflections on grief over his son’s death in 1972 and encounters with Tibetan Buddhist lamas, probing themes of loss, ego dissolution, and non-attachment.[52] [53] Similarly, Nine-Headed Dragon River (1986) compiles essays on his evolving Zen practice, linking meditative states to natural observation and narrative craft.[48] Even in fiction, spiritual undercurrents permeated Matthiessen's portrayals of human frailty and ecological harmony, informed by Zen's emphasis on direct experience over doctrinal abstraction.[54] He maintained that Zen cultivation enhanced his capacity to render reality vividly, avoiding sentimentality in favor of precise, unadorned depiction—as in expeditions blending adventure with introspective inquiry, where writing served as dharma transmission through evocation of the world's intrinsic sacredness.[46] This integration yielded a body of work where spirituality was not ornamental but structural, grounding empirical encounters with nature in metaphysical realism.[44]Activism and expeditions
Environmental conservation efforts
Matthiessen's environmental conservation efforts primarily manifested through his nonfiction writing, expeditions to remote ecosystems, and advocacy against habitat destruction and industrial exploitation. His 1959 book Wildlife in America, commissioned by Sports Illustrated, documented the decline of North American species due to overhunting, habitat loss, and market hunting, serving as an early warning on biodiversity erosion predating Rachel Carson's Silent Spring.[55][56] The work emphasized the need for protective measures, influencing public discourse on wildlife preservation by cataloging species extinctions and advocating for sustained-yield principles akin to those of Theodore Roosevelt.[56] In the 1970s, Matthiessen joined biologist George Schaller on a 1973 expedition into the Dolpo region of Nepal to study snow leopards, an endeavor chronicled in his 1978 National Book Award-winning The Snow Leopard. This account not only detailed the elusive predator's habitat but also highlighted threats from poaching and human encroachment, inspiring widespread reader engagement in high-altitude conservation and embedding the species in global awareness.[57][58] Similar expeditions informed works like The Tree Where Man Was Born (1972), which portrayed East African savannas and critiqued encroaching development on wildlife migrations, and End of the Earth (2003), examining Antarctic and sub-Antarctic biodiversity amid climate pressures.[59][60] These narratives combined natural history with on-the-ground observation to underscore ecological interdependence and human impacts.[61] Matthiessen actively opposed specific threats, contributing an essay to Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: Seasons of Life and Land (2003) after traveling through Alaska's coastal plain, where he decried proposed oil drilling's risks to caribou calving grounds and Gwich'in indigenous sustenance.[62][63] He participated in events advocating permanent protection of the refuge, linking fossil fuel extraction to broader ecosystem disruption.[64] In a 2012 Cornell University lecture titled "Big Oil and Our First Climate Change Refugees," he addressed Arctic permafrost thaw, sea ice loss, and displacement of Bering Sea communities, drawing from visits to Prudhoe Bay and the refuge to critique offshore drilling's exacerbation of warming effects on wildlife and permafrost-dependent hydrology.[65] On his Sagaponack, New York property, Matthiessen maintained undeveloped acreage as a de facto sanctuary for migratory birds and local fauna, aligning personal land stewardship with his writings' emphasis on untrammeled habitats.[66] His efforts, while not tied to formal organizational leadership, leveraged literary influence—evident in contributions to outlets like Audubon magazine—to foster empirical appreciation of conservation imperatives over anthropocentric exploitation.[5]Advocacy for indigenous causes
Matthiessen's advocacy for indigenous causes centered on Native American rights, channeled through extensive fieldwork, investigative reporting, and nonfiction publications that exposed federal overreach and cultural erosion. His 1983 book In the Spirit of Crazy Horse examined the American Indian Movement (AIM), established in 1968 to address urban Native American disenfranchisement and treaty violations, and detailed the June 26, 1975, confrontation on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, where a shootout killed two FBI agents and one Native American, culminating in Leonard Peltier's 1977 conviction for the agents' murders. Matthiessen asserted, based on interviews and trial records, that Peltier's prosecution relied on fabricated evidence—such as mismatched ballistics testimony—and suppressed FBI documents indicating another participant's guilt, framing the case as part of a pattern of counterinsurgency against indigenous activism traceable to broken agreements like the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie.[67][68] The work, spanning over 600 pages, integrated historical context of Lakota resistance, including the 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre, to underscore ongoing sovereignty struggles.[69] Publication of In the Spirit of Crazy Horse prompted libel suits in 1984 from FBI agents and a reservation official, alleging defamation; Viking Press briefly withdrew the book amid threats, but appellate courts in 1986 and later rulings upheld First Amendment defenses, enabling a 1991 revised edition and setting precedents for journalistic protections in controversial reporting.[70] Critics, however, contended that Matthiessen's narrative overly sympathized with AIM leadership, minimizing documented factional violence on Pine Ridge—where over 60 traditionalists were killed amid internal conflicts from 1973 to 1976—and portraying militants as untainted heirs to figures like Crazy Horse, despite evidence of AIM's urban recruitment tactics and resource diversions.[71][72] In Indian Country (1984), Matthiessen compiled dispatches from visits to tribes including the Hopi in Arizona, Miccosukee in Florida, Cherokee in North Carolina, and Mohawk in New York, cataloging threats from mining, dams, and urban expansion to sacred sites and subsistence economies.[73] Drawing from direct observations and elder testimonies, he advocated for federal adherence to treaty obligations and resistance to capitalist incursions, emphasizing preservation of oral traditions and land stewardship amid declining populations—e.g., Hopi clans reduced by relocation pressures. This body of work, totaling hundreds of pages of advocacy journalism, amplified indigenous voices when mainstream attention was sparse, influencing policy debates on reservation autonomy.[24] Matthiessen extended support to Arctic indigenous practices, defending Inuit whaling rights in writings and testimonies against international bans, arguing that bowhead hunts sustained communities culturally and nutritionally in environments where alternatives were impractical, countering animal rights groups' disregard for subsistence contexts.[24] His efforts prioritized empirical documentation over abstract ethics, though they drew from personal expeditions rather than organizational leadership.Controversies
Deception regarding CIA ties
Peter Matthiessen joined the Central Intelligence Agency in 1950 shortly after graduating from Yale University, where a professor had recruited him for intelligence work.[74] In 1953, while stationed undercover in Paris, he co-founded the literary magazine The Paris Review with George Plimpton and others, utilizing the publication as a cover for his CIA operations to monitor expatriate intellectuals and cultural figures during the early Cold War.[18] [4] Matthiessen concealed his agency affiliation from his Paris Review co-founders and editorial staff for over a year, presenting himself solely as a literary enthusiast to avoid compromising his covert role.[19] Plimpton, upon learning the truth in 1954 after Matthiessen's confession, expressed shock and betrayal, later stating in a documentary that Matthiessen had founded the magazine explicitly as CIA cover without informing the team.[4] This secrecy extended to using Paris Review interviews and connections to gather intelligence, though the extent of active espionage versus passive cover remains debated among associates.[75] Matthiessen resigned from the CIA in late 1953, citing disillusionment with the agency's internal politics and operations, but he continued to obscure the depth of his involvement in subsequent years.[76] Public revelation accelerated in the 1970s amid broader disclosures of CIA cultural funding, with Matthiessen's son Lucas inadvertently confirming details to a New York Times reporter in the 1990s.[77] In interviews and memoirs, Matthiessen minimized the episode as brief and inconsequential, claiming it involved no significant spying, a portrayal critics like Plimpton contested as understating the deception's impact on trust within literary circles.[78] Biographers have noted this pattern of evasion persisted, with Matthiessen framing his early agency ties as youthful naivety rather than deliberate subterfuge.[24]Legal challenges from In the Spirit of Crazy Horse
The book In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, published in February 1983 by Viking Penguin, detailed the 1975 shootout at Pine Ridge Indian Reservation involving FBI agents and American Indian Movement members, focusing on the case of Leonard Peltier, whom Matthiessen portrayed as wrongfully convicted.[70] Within months of publication, two libel lawsuits were filed against Matthiessen and the publisher: one in South Dakota by then-Governor William Janklow, alleging defamation through implications of his involvement in reservation violence and ties to vigilante groups; and another in Minnesota federal court by FBI agent David Price, claiming the book falsely accused him of participating in death squads targeting Native activists and of perjury in Peltier's trial.[79][80][81] Faced with the multimillion-dollar claims—Price seeking $25 million—Viking Penguin withdrew the book from sale later in 1983 to mitigate further legal exposure, effectively halting distribution for nearly eight years despite critical acclaim for its investigative depth on FBI tactics and reservation conflicts.[82][70] In Price v. Viking Penguin (1988), U.S. District Judge Paul A. Magnuson dismissed the suit, ruling that passages about Price constituted rhetorical hyperbole and opinion within an advocacy work rather than verifiable factual assertions of criminal conduct, protected under the First Amendment; the judge noted the book's subjective narrative style made it unlikely for readers to interpret it as neutral reporting.[81][83] Janklow's suit advanced further but was ultimately resolved without a trial verdict against Matthiessen, contributing to the prolonged litigation that strained resources and amplified debates over press freedom versus personal reputation in controversial nonfiction.[84] The cases settled or concluded by late 1990, allowing a revised edition's release in 1991 with added context on the disputes but no substantive changes to the core allegations.[82][79] These challenges underscored tensions between journalistic advocacy critiquing government actions—drawing on interviews, trial records, and eyewitness accounts—and defamation standards, with courts prioritizing contextual opinion over literal fact-checking in Matthiessen's partisan framing.[83]Debates over portrayals in Crazy Horse
Matthiessen's In the Spirit of Crazy Horse (1983) frames the narrative of modern Native American activism, particularly the American Indian Movement (AIM), through the historical lens of Lakota warrior Crazy Horse (c. 1840–1877), portraying him as a symbol of principled resistance against U.S. expansionism and treaty violations. Drawing from Lakota oral traditions and historical accounts, Matthiessen depicts Crazy Horse's leadership in battles like the Fetterman Fight (December 21, 1866) and Little Bighorn (June 25, 1876) as embodying spiritual discipline, strategic defiance, and refusal to surrender land, contrasting this with the government's betrayal of the 1868 Fort Laramie Treaty. This portrayal serves to legitimize AIM's confrontations, such as the 1973 Wounded Knee occupation, as continuations of that legacy.[67] Critics challenged the validity of this symbolic linkage, arguing it idealized AIM's often fractious and violent methods by overlaying them with Crazy Horse's austere ethos. Legal scholar Alan M. Dershowitz, in a March 6, 1983, New York Times Book Review critique, contended that AIM radicals "did not act in the selfless spirit of Chief Crazy Horse, that noble 19th-century leader of Indian resistance," but instead mirrored the destructiveness of General George Custer, pursuing personal power through actions that alienated allies and damaged Native interests, including internal purges and civilian casualties during standoffs. Dershowitz highlighted empirical discrepancies, such as AIM's involvement in shootouts like the June 26, 1975, Oglala incident that killed FBI agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams, as evidence of self-defeating aggression rather than disciplined warfare akin to Crazy Horse's avoidance of noncombatant harm.[85] Defenders, including some Indigenous commentators, maintained that Matthiessen's invocation accurately captured causal continuities in systemic dispossession, with Crazy Horse's unyielding stance against reservation confinement paralleling AIM's pushback against 20th-century Bureau of Indian Affairs corruption and resource extraction on Pine Ridge Reservation. However, these debates underscore broader skepticism toward the book's selective emphasis: while Crazy Horse's biography relies on verifiable events like his September 5, 1877, bayoneting at Fort Robinson, critics like Dershowitz viewed the extension to AIM as unsubstantiated romanticism, prioritizing narrative advocacy over rigorous disaggregation of historical versus contemporary motives. No major challenges emerged to the factual core of Crazy Horse's depiction, which aligns with established sources like He Dog's eyewitness testimonies, but the interpretive portrayal fueled contention over whether it justified or obscured AIM's documented infighting and FBI provocations.[85]Personal life
Marriages, family, and relationships
Matthiessen married Patricia Southgate on February 8, 1951; the couple divorced in 1958.[13] They had two children: a son, Lucas Matthiessen, and a daughter, Sara Carey Matthiessen.[1] His second marriage was to writer Deborah Love on May 16, 1963; she died of cancer in 1972.[13] [6] Love introduced Matthiessen to Zen Buddhism, and the couple participated in early LSD experiments conducted by Timothy Leary.[6] Matthiessen adopted Love's daughter from a previous relationship, Rue Matthiessen, and they had a son together, Alexander (Alex) Matthiessen, born in 1964.[86] [8] Matthiessen's third marriage was to Maria Eckhart on November 28, 1980; she survived him.[13] [1] Eckhart, born in Tanzania and formerly a media buyer in London, had moved in with Matthiessen prior to their Zen ceremony wedding.[87] No children are recorded from this marriage.[1] Matthiessen later reflected that he was not a strong father to his four children, citing his absences due to travel and expeditions.[88]Final years, illness, and death
In the later years of his life, Matthiessen resided at his home in Sagaponack, New York, where he continued writing despite advancing age and health challenges. He completed his final novel, In Paradise, which explored themes of Holocaust survivors and Buddhist contemplation at Auschwitz, submitting the manuscript shortly before his death.[1][6] This work reflected his ongoing integration of Zen Buddhism and literary pursuits, drawing from personal travels and spiritual reflections.[89] Matthiessen was diagnosed with acute leukemia in early 2013, undergoing treatment for over a year that included monthly courses of chemotherapy, such as decitabine administered intravenously over five consecutive days at Stony Brook Cancer Center.[1][90] Despite the rigors of treatment, he maintained a schedule of interviews and literary engagements, demonstrating resilience informed by his Zen practice.[91] The illness progressed to an advanced stage, with sources noting it as stage 4 leukemia, though leukemia staging differs from solid tumors.[92] Matthiessen died on April 5, 2014, at the age of 86, from complications of leukemia, at his home in Sagaponack.[1][89] His death occurred three days before the publication of In Paradise on April 8, 2014, marking the end of a prolific career spanning novels, naturalist nonfiction, and environmental advocacy.[6][90]Awards and recognition
Major literary prizes
Peter Matthiessen received the National Book Award on three occasions, making him the only author to win in both fiction and nonfiction categories.[93][12] His first win came in 1979 for The Snow Leopard in the Contemporary Thought category, recognizing the book's blend of travel narrative, natural history, and spiritual reflection on a Himalayan expedition following personal loss.[94] The following year, 1980, he won again for the paperback edition of The Snow Leopard, then classified under General Nonfiction amid shifts in award categories.[93] In 2008, Matthiessen secured the National Book Award for Fiction for Shadow Country, a revised and condensed version of his Watson trilogy chronicling Florida's outlaw Edgar J. Watson; the win followed debate over its eligibility as substantially new work, yet affirmed its literary merit in reimagining historical violence and ambiguity.[34][93] These awards underscored his versatility across genres, from introspective nonfiction to expansive historical novels.[66]Other honors and memberships
Matthiessen was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1974, an honor society recognizing distinguished achievement in literature, music, and art.[95][10] He received the Academy's Arts and Letters Award in Literature in 1963.[35] In 1995, he was awarded the Heinz Award for Arts and Humanities by the Heinz Family Foundation, recognizing his contributions to literature through fiction and nonfiction works exploring nature, exploration, and human experience.[96] Matthiessen co-founded the literary quarterly The Paris Review in 1953 alongside George Plimpton and others, serving as its first fiction editor and contributing to its early establishment as a prominent platform for contemporary writing.[14][90] Yale University conferred an honorary Doctor of Letters degree upon Matthiessen in 2007 during its commencement exercises.[97]Works
Fiction
Matthiessen's fiction, spanning over six decades, often intertwined themes of wilderness, cultural clash, moral ambiguity, and human violence with his experiences as a naturalist and traveler. His early novels, published in the 1950s and 1960s, drew from personal seafaring adventures and explorations of remote environments, reflecting a modernist style influenced by his contemporaries. Later works shifted toward epic narratives examining historical figures and frontier myths, particularly in the Florida Everglades, where he dissected the blurred lines between pioneer ambition and brutality.[98][10] His debut novel, Race Rock (1954), centers on young men involved in a yacht race off Long Island, exploring class tensions and youthful recklessness amid maritime peril; it received mixed reviews for its stylistic ambition but was later disavowed by Matthiessen as immature.[98][99] Partisans (1955), also known as The Passionate Seekers, follows expatriates in post-World War II Europe grappling with ideological disillusionment. Raditzer (1961) portrays a sailor's desertion and return to civilian life, echoing Matthiessen's own naval service. The Year of the Tempest (1957) depicts political intrigue in a fictional Latin American setting. These works established his interest in outsider perspectives but were overshadowed by his nonfiction output.[98][99] At Play in the Fields of the Lord (1965), set in the Brazilian Amazon, examines the collision between evangelical missionaries, mercenaries, and indigenous tribes, critiquing Western imperialism and environmental destruction; nominated for the National Book Award, it was adapted into a 1991 film directed by Héctor Babenco.[28][26] Far Tortuga (1975), an experimental novel narrated in dialect about turtlers in the Caribbean, innovates with fragmented prose to evoke the sea's vastness and obsolescence of traditional livelihoods, earning praise for its linguistic daring despite commercial underperformance.[98][25] Matthiessen's most ambitious fictional project was the Watson trilogy, inspired by the historical Edgar "Bloody" Watson, a 19th-century Florida sugarcane planter suspected of multiple murders. Killing Mister Watson (1990) unfolds through multiple voices recounting Watson's enigmatic death in 1910, questioning frontier justice. Lost Man's River (1997) follows a son's quest for paternal truth amid Everglades lore. Bone by Bone (1999), from Watson's viewpoint, probes his psyche and rationalizes his violence as survival in a lawless borderland. Condensed and revised as Shadow Country (2008), this one-volume edition won the National Book Award for Fiction, with judges citing its "fierce originality" in reimagining American mythos.[10][98][25] His final novel, In Paradise (2014), published posthumously, fictionalizes a writer's participation in a Holocaust meditation retreat at Auschwitz, blending historical reflection with metaphysical inquiry into suffering and detachment, though critics noted its uneven fusion of fact and invention.[100][98] Overall, Matthiessen's fiction, while less celebrated than his travelogues, demonstrated a commitment to narrative innovation and ecological humanism, often prioritizing authenticity over plot convention.[28]Nonfiction
Matthiessen's nonfiction writings, spanning over five decades, primarily explored themes of natural history, wilderness exploration, conservation, and cultural encounters, often blending personal travel narratives with ecological observation and philosophical reflection influenced by his Zen Buddhist practice. His early works focused on American and global wildlife, drawing from expeditions and field research conducted as a naturalist. For instance, Wildlife in America (1959) examined the historical decline of North American fauna due to habitat loss and overhunting, advocating for preservation efforts based on direct observations of species like the passenger pigeon and bison.[28] Similarly, The Cloud Forest: A Chronicle of the South American Wilderness (1961) recounted travels through remote Andean and Amazonian regions, documenting biodiversity and indigenous interactions while highlighting threats from deforestation.[101] In the 1960s and 1970s, Matthiessen expanded into ethnographic and oceanic nonfiction, including Under the Mountain Wall: A Chronicle of Two Seasons in the Stone Age (1962), which detailed a journey among the tribal peoples of New Guinea's highlands, emphasizing their hunter-gatherer lifestyles amid encroaching modernization. Blue Meridian: The Search for the Great White Shark (1971) chronicled a pursuit of the elusive predator across global seas, combining marine biology with critiques of overfishing and mythologized human-shark conflicts. These expeditions underscored his commitment to immersive fieldwork, often supported by organizations like the New York Zoological Society. The Tree Where Man Was Born (1972), a finalist for the National Book Award, vividly portrayed East African savannas and wildlife migrations, integrating Maasai cultural insights with warnings about poaching and land encroachment.[28][2] Later works delved into spiritual quests and social injustices. The Snow Leopard (1978), published by Viking Press, narrated a 1973 Himalayan trek with biologist George Schaller in search of the rare feline, interwoven with meditations on grief, mortality, and Tibetan Buddhism following the death of Matthiessen's wife; it earned the National Book Award for Contemporary Thought in 1980.[102][2] Sand Rivers (1981) described a rugged traverse of Mozambique's interior, focusing on elephant populations decimated by ivory trade. Matthiessen also addressed human rights, as in Sal Si Puedes: Cesar Chavez and the New American Revolution (1972), a profile of the labor organizer's farmworkers' movement, and In the Spirit of Crazy Horse (1983), which investigated the American Indian Movement, the 1975 Pine Ridge shootout, and Leonard Peltier's conviction, alleging FBI overreach based on interviews and trial records—though the book faced libel lawsuits delaying its revised edition until 1991.[103] Subsequent titles like African Silences (1991) critiqued colonial legacies and wildlife trafficking across the continent, while East of Lo Monthang: In the Land of Mustang (1995) extended his Himalayan explorations into Mustang's forbidden kingdom, blending cartography, ecology, and Buddhist lore. Collections such as The Nine-Headed Dragon River (1986) compiled essays on Zen practice, fishing, and nature writing. Matthiessen's nonfiction output totaled over a dozen major volumes, frequently praised for lyrical prose and empirical detail but critiqued by some for subjective interpretations prioritizing personal insight over strict scientific detachment.[28][36]Short stories and collections
On the River Styx and Other Stories (1989) is Matthiessen's primary collection of short fiction, comprising ten stories composed over approximately three decades from the early 1950s onward.[104] Published by Random House in hardcover with 208 pages, the volume gathers narratives originally appearing in literary magazines, arranged chronologically by publication date.[105] These works often depict encounters with remote landscapes, human frailty, and ethical tensions, echoing Matthiessen's nonfiction explorations of wilderness and cultural margins.[106] The included stories are:- "Sadie"
- "The Fifth Day"
- "The Centerpiece"
- "Late in the Season"
- "Travelin' Man"
- "The Wolves of Águila"
- "Horse Latitudes"
- "Midnight Turning Gray Blue"
- "On the River Styx"
- Appendix: A note on "The Wolves of Águila"[107]