


Striking Through The Masks: A LIterary Memoir
(Capitola Book Company, 2008)
From his family background in the world of Brooklyn’s Jewish gangsters through his early years on the rough streets of New York City in the 1940s, and from San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district in the 1960s through his arrival and forty-year residency in Santa Cruz, poet Morton Marcus tells the story of his growth
from embattled youth to uneasy adulthood. Filled with a rogues’ gallery of colorful characters and numerous anecdotes, as well as descriptions of his unconventional travels in Greece, Australia, Tahiti, Croatia, and the Czech Republic, "Striking Through the Masks" conjures up the last half of t
Striking Through The Masks
Book Launch Event
March 13, 2008
he twentieth century and the opening decade of the new millennium. While recounting his own struggle to find self-awareness and wisdom, Marcus vividly describes his life and times through portraits of notable people he has intimately known or with whom he briefly came
into contact. In vignette after vignette, he strikes through the public masks of President Richard Nixon, Nobel Prize winner Czeslaw Milosz, composer Lou Harrison, short story writer Raymond Carver, United States Poet Laureate Charles Simic, and many others to glimpse private moments that show tell-tale aspects of their personalities.