Concerning Lafcadio Hearn; With a Bibliography by Laura Stedman by George M. Gould
Let's be honest, the title sounds like a dusty academic paper. But Concerning Lafcadio Hearn is anything but boring. This is a biography with a very specific point of view. It was written by George Gould, who wasn't just a fan—he was Hearn's personal physician and friend. The book isn't a simple timeline of Hearn's life, from his rough childhood to his fame in Japan. Instead, Gould zooms in on the man's physical and mental state.
The Story
Gould walks us through Hearn's world, but through the lens of a doctor's notes. He describes Hearn's nearly blinding eye problems, his chronic headaches, and his fragile nerves. Gould connects these struggles directly to Hearn's work. He suggests that because Hearn's vision was so poor, his other senses—especially hearing and imagination—became supercharged. This, Gould argues, is why Hearn's writing is so intensely descriptive and atmospheric, particularly in those famous ghost stories. The book becomes an argument: Hearn's genius wasn't despite his suffering, but because of it. Laura Stedman's detailed bibliography at the end adds a layer of authority, cataloging everything Hearn ever wrote, which helps ground Gould's personal theories in fact.
Why You Should Read It
This book fascinated me because it flips the script on how we think about creative people. We often separate the 'artist' from the 'human.' Gould refuses to do that. He shows us a Hearn who was irritable, sensitive, and in constant pain, and then shows us how that very pain filtered into beautiful, eerie prose. It's a deeply humanizing portrait. You get the sense Gould is trying to defend his friend, to explain him to a world that might only see the exotic output, not the struggling man behind it. Reading it feels like getting a secret, backstage pass to an artist's life.
Final Verdict
This isn't the first book to read if you know nothing about Lafcadio Hearn. Start with his own stories like Kwaidan. But if you've read his work and found yourself wondering, 'What kind of person writes this stuff?'—then this is your next read. It's perfect for readers interested in the messy connection between life and art, for fans of unconventional biographies, or for anyone who enjoys a thoughtful, slightly argumentative character study. It's a short, opinionated, and deeply personal look at a forgotten literary giant.
Deborah Moore
1 month agoThis is one of those stories where the atmosphere created is totally immersive. I would gladly recommend this title.