From the streets of the Bronx to the heights of American letters, novelist Don DeLillo’s journey charts the story of a boy made good—and then made great. Born in New York City on November 20, 1936, DeLillo grew up in an Italian-American Catholic household in the Fordham section of the Bronx, a neighbourhood shaped by immigrant ambition. (perival.com)
He attended Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx, before enrolling at Fordham University, where he graduated in 1958 with a bachelor’s in “communication arts.” (National Book Foundation) His borough roots remain formative. As one interview put it, “I think of myself as the kid from the Bronx.” (The Guardian)
Bronx Origins & Fordham Credentials
For literary watchers and local-pride enthusiasts alike, DeLillo’s credentials check every box: Bronx upbringing, Cardinal Hayes alumnus, Fordham Class of 1958. His early years in the Bronx—bocce games, stoop-ball, Italian-English chatter, the city’s “noise”—all seeded what would become his hallmark: an acute awareness of American culture, media saturation, existential dread, consumerism, and the silent pulse beneath everyday life. (Cambridge University Press & Assessment)
That background matters. It underpins his work not as mere biographical trivia, but as texture. In one interview, DeLillo said that the time he waited cars in a parking lot job helped him to “read for hours” and to begin writing novels. (Wikipedia)
A Literary Career of Range and Depth
DeLillo…
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