"American Mirror: The Life and Art of Norman Rockwell", Deborah Solomon's new biography of illustrator and artist, is a pleasure to read. Written in chapters of years, the bio gives an even look at Rockwell's long and successful career, while not neglecting his personal life.Another reviewer of Solomon's book was very outspoken in condemning what he saw as Solomon's "insinuations" about Norman Rockwell's sexuality. But the things she wrote, the examples she brought up about Rockwell's predilections, were definitely ambiguous. Solomon writes that he always felt more comfortable in the company of men than women but says outright that there were no hints of a sexual dalliances with men. He was married three times, and while the first two were definitely not happy, his third, in his 60's to an unmarried teacher, was successful. Now maybe that's because Molly Rockwell didn't expect much other than companionship...Norman Rockwell was not particularly "personable" in his domestic life. Born in 1894, the younger of two sons, Norman was not close to his birth family. His father died relatively young and his mother - a hypochondriac - lived well into old age. Keeping this woman at bay while providing for her financially all her life was difficult. He managed to not stay involved with her, as well as with his older brother. Was he close to his three sons by his second wife? I didn't get the impression he was from Solomon's book. Married three times; divorced from his first wife and widowed by his second, his third wife out lived him. He lived many years in Arlington, Vermont, he relocated to Stockbridge, Massachusetts to have his second wife - an alcoholic - treated at the Austin Riggs clinic. But Rockwell himself was treated by doctors there, too, including the famed analyst Erik Erikson.But what about his art?. He always claimed to be an "illustrator" but I think most people think of him as an artist. Certainly different in his works of "realism" than the works of other, more modernist artists, he appreciated the works of de Kooning, Pollock, and others of his time. He was successful for 60 years and his art followed the small-town America he lived in (though born and raised in and near New York City) most of his life. One of the most interesting facts about Norman Rockwell were his political leanings as revealed late in life. He called himself an "Eisenhower Republican" but voted for John Kennedy in 1960. He was sympathetic to the 1960's political and social upheavals, particularly the Civil Rights movement. And although he found faces to draw from his small-town neighbors, he enjoyed spending time in southern California and was a world traveler.Deborah Solomon's biography manages to be as interesting as the subject himself. This book is well worth reading. Also worth the trip is a visit to the Norman Rockwell Museum outside Stockbridge, MA.