Benfey’s best defense turns out to be the book itself, which doesn’t attempt a full-throated rehab job. An Americanist who has written very good books about Emily Dickinson and Stephen Crane, among others, Benfey mostly steers clear of Kipling’s politics, and instead concentrates on a little-known chapter in Kipling’s life: the four years that this outspoken defender of the British Empire spent living just outside Brattleboro, Vermont, where he wrote some of his best work, including “ The Jungle Book” and “The Second Jungle Book,” “ Captains Courageous,” and the first draft of “ Kim.” Kipling’s American sojourn is hardly an “untold story”-it figures in all the biographies-but Benfey tells it well, catching nuances that some biographers have missed. He argues that Kipling was profoundly altered by his experience of America, and that America, in turn, was altered by its experience of Kipling. But you could also make a case that neither was changed enough. Kipling never learned to lighten up-or to appreciate American humor and informality-and America, by his lights, never got over being headstrong and overly sure of itself. Kipling wound up in Brattleboro because, in January, 1892, when he was twenty-six and already famous for tales and poems he had published about India, he married a Vermonter named Carrie Balestier. Theirs was such a perplexing union that you wish that Benfey had gone into more detail about it. He doesn’t tell you, for example, just how much Kipling’s family and most of his friends disliked Carrie. They thought her unattractive and opinionated, not nearly feminine enough. Kipling’s father said she was “a good man spoiled.” Most Kipling biographers have depicted her as a nag, a harridan, a ball-breaker. So what did Kipling see in her? Mostly, it seems, he saw her brother, who was Kipling’s friend and literary agent.
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