Diana Trilling


Diana Trilling was an American literary critic and author, one of the New York Intellectuals.

Background

Born Diana Rubin, she married the literary and cultural critic Lionel Trilling in 1929 after an extended stay in Paris with childhood friend Margaret Lefranc. Her parents, Sadie and Joseph Rubin, were Polish Jews, her father from Warsaw and her mother from the local countryside. She graduated from Radcliffe College.

Career

Diana Trilling was a reviewer for The Nation magazine. Her works include We Must March My Darlings, an essay collection; Mrs. Harris, a study of and meditation on the trial of Jean Harris; and The Beginning of the Journey, a memoir of her life and marriage to Lionel Trilling.
She was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1976.

Cultural impact

wrote about Trilling in her own final memoirs, When Men Were the Only Models We Had. In his 1986 essay collection , Martin Amis discusses the experience of meeting Trilling and her impact on New York City:

In New York, Diana Trilling is regarded with the suspicious awe customarily reserved for the city's senior literary ladies. Whenever I announced my intention of going along to interview her, people looked at me with trepidation, a new respect, a certain holy dread. I felt I was about to enter the lion's den — or the den of the literary lionness, which is often just as dangerous.