This letter appeared in the New York Times on Dec. 21, 2014.

To the Editor:

As the president of the Stuttering Foundation, I was amazed at the omission, in the Nov. 23 review of James Booth’s “Philip Larkin: Life, Art and Love,” of Larkin’s lifelong struggle with stuttering. The review states that “Booth has a good ear for Larkin’s real-life speech,” yet makes no mention of how Larkin’s real-life fractured speech fed his expression as a writer. Many writers achieved on the page a fluency that otherwise eluded them. The Stuttering Foundation’s website maintains a list; it includes Lewis Carroll, John Gregory Dunne, John Updike and Somerset Maugham.

The review could also have mentioned that Larkin is a hero to the stuttering community in Britain in the same way King George VI is.

JANE FRASER

MEMPHIS

Philip Larkin is included on the Stuttering Foundation's list of Famous People Who Stutter.