Category Archives: Fiction

Thought of the Day 9.3.12 Ludovico Ariosto

“When the devil grows old he turns hermit”

Ludovico Ariosto 

c. 1510

c. 1510 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Ludovico Ariosto was born on this day in Reggio Emilia, Italy, in 1474. Today is the 538th anniversary of his birth.

Ariosto was the eldest of 10 children born to an affluent family. His father, Count Niccolo Ariosto, was the commander of the citadel, and Ludovico was supposed to follow in the his footsteps. He studied law, languages and literature.  He had a great love of poetry and wanted to become a writer, but he was obliged to support his family. When his father died, in 1500, he took over the family estate. In 1503 he began to work for Cardinal Ippolito D’Este who acted as Ariosto’s patron for a few years. Later he worked for the Cardinal’s brother, Alfonso I, Duke of Ferrara. In 1522 he was sent to wilderness of Garfagnana, Ferrara as governor. He did not take to the remote location of the bandits.

Statue of Ludovico Ariosto in Reggio Emilia

Ariosto snuck time to write some comedies, prose and poetry when his duties permitted. His play Cassaria was staged in 1508 and I Suppositi followed in 1509. (It was translated into English and was the inspiration for parts of  Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew.) He wrote 5 comedies and 7 satires.

His greatest work, indeed ” the most celebrated narrative poem of the Italian high Renaissance” [Books and Writers] was Orlando Furioso. It was first published in 1516 at a length of  40 cantos.  The epic poem was revised and added to several times with the final version, at 46 cantos, appearing in 1532.  An additional 5 cantos , the Cinque canti were published by his son Virgino after the poet’s death.

 The plot revolves around the conflict of the Christian versus the Moor, the war between Charles, the Holy Roman Emperor, and Agramante, King of North Africa, and Marsilio, King of Spain. With the defeat and death of Agramante, the conflict ends, and Marsilio returns to Spain. [Books and Writers]

Two editions of Orlando Furioso.

The piece was so popular that, rumor has it, when the last revision came out Queen Elizabeth banned the English translator of the work from Court until he completed his task so he wouldn’t be distracted. Artist, composers and other writers have used characters from Orlando Furioso as their muse. Portrait of a Gentleman by Titian is one such work. His A Man with a Quilted Sleeve is believed to be Ludovico.


Thought of the Day 9.1.12 Edgar Rice Burroughs

“I write to escape…to escape poverty.”

Edgar Rice Burroughs

Русский: Эдгар Райс Берроуз

Edgar Rice Burroughs (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Edgar Rice Burroughs was born on this day in Chicago, Illinois in 1875. Today is the 137th anniversary of his birth.

He was the middle child Major George Burroughs and his wife Mary Evaline. His younger siblings died of childhood diseases, leaving him the baby of the family. He bounced around several different local schools. Whenever there was an outbreak of a disease his parents took him out of one school and put him in another.  Since schools taught Latin and Greek as well as English he later …

“his erratic schooling… resulted in his … learning little English while taking the same Greek and Latin courses over and over again. Despite his claims to the contrary, this early exposure to Classical literature and mythology would serve Burroughs well in his future writing career.” [The Official Edgar Rice Burroughs Mini-Bio]

When a flu epidemic swept through Chicago his parents sent a teenaged Edgar to his brothers’ cattle ranch in Idaho. He love the rough and tumble “wild west”  with its range wars and saloon shoot outs and he lived there for six months before his parents realized the danger of  frontier life was on par with the danger of getting influenza. They called him home and enrolled him in Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. He didn’t last long there and was soon transferred to the more structured  Michigan Military Academy. He failed the West Point entrance exam  and signed up for the Army  as a private where he served with the 7th US Cavalry at Fort Grant, Arizona Territory. He was discharged from the Army for a heart condition in 1897.

In 1899 he was back in Chicago working for his father ‘s company, and the next year he married his childhood sweetheart, Emma Hulbert. After a few years he and Emma travelled west to Idaho so he could try his luck with his brothers again, this time at gold mining. But that venture soon went bust and Burroughs went through a number of jobs from railway policeman to peddler for quack medicine.

One of his jobs was as a pencil sharpener wholesaler. He placed ads for the pencil sharpeners in pulp fiction magazines and he would read through the magazines to check the placement of the ads.

“After reading several thousand words of breathless pulp fiction Burroughs determined … that ‘if people were paid for writing rot such as I read in some of those magazines that I could write stories just as rotten. As a matter of fact, although I had never written a story, I knew absolutely that I could write stories just as entertaining and probably a whole lot more so than any I chanced to read in those magazines.'” [The Official Edgar Rice Burroughs Mini-Bio]

Cover of "Under the Moons of Mars: A Prin...

Cover via Amazon

In fact he had already written stories, but his introduction into the pulp fiction market with Under the Moons of Mars,  for which he received a whopping $400 from All-Story magazine, was a turning point in his career. The story was serialized  in the magazine and produced as a novel under its original name of A Princess of Mars. By the time the last installment was published in July of 1912 Burroughs had completed two more novels. The Outlaw of Torn and Tarzan of the Apes. Outlaw was not picked up by the publisher, but Tarzan was an immediate hit. Burroughs got $700 for the book. He wrote a number of sequels for both Mars (11, including John Carter of Mars) and Tarzan (26).

Dustjacket by Armstrong Sperry for the first e...

Dustjacket by Armstrong Sperry for the first edition of Tarzan and the Lost Empire by Edgar Rice Burroughs (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Other book series by Burroughs includes:

  • The Pellucidar series, which takes place in the hollow shell of the Earth (7 books, including one featuring a cross over appearance from Tarzan).
  • The Venus series, where Carson Napier, who is attempting a solo flight to Mars, crash lands instead on the watery planet of Venus. — look for a film made from the series coming out next year. (5 books)
  • The Caspak series, a prehistoric series, including The Land That Time Forgot (3 books)

He crossed writing genres at will penning social realism, horror stories, and westerns (and more).

Burroughs was living in Honolulu,  Hawaii when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. He volunteered  to serve the war effort as a war correspondent  (the oldest in the Pacific theatre).

He died on March 19, 1950.

English: Bookplate of American writer Edgar Ri...

English: Bookplate of American writer Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950) showing Tarzan holding the planet Mars, surrounded by other characters from Burroughs’ stories and symbols relating to the author’s personal interests and career. Associated media: File:Letter from Edgar Rice Burroughs to Ruthven Deane 1922.jpg explaining the design of his bookplate. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


Thought of the Day 8.31.12 William Saroyan

“I can’t hate for long. It isn’t worth it.”

“The role of art is to make a world which can be tolerated.”

“Try as much as possible to be wholly alive, with all your might, and when you laugh, laugh like hell and when you get angry, get good and angry. Try to be alive. You will be dead soon enough.”

–William Saroyan

William Saroyan, American writer.

William Saroyan, American writer. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

William Saroyan was born on this day in Fresno, California in 1908. Today is the 104th anniversary of his birth.

William was the youngest son of Armenian immigrant parents. His father died when he was 3 years old. William and his siblings went to the Fred Finch Orphanage in Oakland while their mother, Tahooki, found what work she could in San Francisco.  Six years later the family reunited as Tahooki got permanent work at a cannery in Fresno. He didn’t like school. The work was boring and he was picked on because he was the son of an immigrant. But he liked to learn, he liked to read and he like to write. He took advantage of the Fresno public library’s book collection and he took a course on typing at the Technical School. He sold newspapers to help with family finances, and worked his way up to messenger boy with a telegram company.

He travelled around the country hoping to become the next big American writer, but luck wasn’t with him (one time his suitcase, with most of his money and clothes inside, wound up in New Orleans instead of with him in New York.) So Saroyan returned to California and took a string of uninspiring jobs from working in a funeral parlor to selling vegetables at a farmers market. All the time he was writing on the side.

In 1933 he started to get published. His earned $15 when his short story The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze appeared in the national magazine Story. Encouraged by the publication he decided to send the magazine one story a day for the entire month of January.

This he proceeded systematically to do, still full of the usual doubts that harass the unestablished writer, but determined to carry through the ambitious work program in as positive frame of mind as possible. He began with no firm ideas as to what the stories would be about… Midway through the month a telegram… arrived from the editors with the message he needed: yes, the stories were being received with great interest — keep them coming! This was the decisive moment of acceptance, marking the end of his long apprenticeship…. [Brian Darwent, William Saroyan Society, Biographical Sketch]

Other, higher paying, magazines began to take an interest. His stories appeared in The American Mercury, Harper’s, Scribner’s and others. A collection of his short stories was published by Random House in 1934 and became a best seller.

He traveled overseas, making a pilgrimage to his father’s homeland of Armenia. (He couldn’t make it as far his father home town, which was now a part of Turkey, but he did get to Erivan, Soviet Armenia.) Along the way he met Charlie Chaplin, George Bernard Shaw and Finnish composer Jean Sibelius.

He added playwriting to his skill list  in 1939 with My Heart’s in the Highlands. The play centers around a struggling Arminian American poet and his son Johnny.  His second play The Time of Your Life won a Pulitzer Prize (which Saroyan refused) and The New York Drama Critic’s Circle Best Play award (which he accepted.)  It takes place in Nick’s Pacific Street Saloon and centers around a wealthy young man named Joe and a bar full of colorful characters. The play has been revived several times on Broadway and in LA, and has been made into a big screen movie, with James Cagney and a Playhouse 90 television movie with Jackie Gleason.

First edition cover

First edition cover (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Human Comedy was produced by MGM Studios. Saroyan was under contract with Louis B. Mayer and he wrote and directed a short film called The Good Job as well as the 4.5 hour screen play for The Human Comedy (which Mayer turned over to another writer to edit down.) Saroyan also wrote a novel  on the same material that came out the same week as the film. The sentimental story was based on his life growing up as an immigrant in Fresno and it won an Oscar for the writer.

After WWII his writing career cooled. He was considered to sentimental and sugary for the harder edged, post-war critics.

 Saroyan praised freedom; brotherly love and universal benevolence were for him basic values, but with his idealism Saroyan was considered more or less out of date. [Books and Writers]

But he continued to write prolifically. In 1952 he published his memoir The Bicycle Rider in Beverly Hills.

Just before he died of cancer in 1981 he called the Associated Press quipping “Everybody has got to die, but I have always believed an exception would be made in my case. Now what?”

Stanford University has a large collection of his works and the author is celebrated by the William Saroyan Society. 

William Saroyan statue, Yerevan

William Saroyan statue, Yerevan (Photo credit: tm-tm)


Thought of the Day 8.30.12 Mary Woolstonecraft Shelley

“We are tomorrow’s past.”

–Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

English: Cropped portrait of Mary Shelley

English: Cropped portrait of Mary Shelley (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin was born on  this day in London, England in 1797. This is the 215th anniversary of her birth.

She was born into a family of  “intellectual rebels.” Her mother, Mary Wollstonecraft…

“the celebrated author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792), died of puerperal fever, leaving Godwin, [her father, William Godwin] the author of An Enquiry Concerning Political Justice (1793), to care for Mary and her three-year-old half-sister, Fanny Imlay.”[Eleanor Ty, Wilfrid Laurier University]

English: William Godwin, oil on canvas, 1802, ...

English: William Godwin, oil on canvas, 1802, 29 1/2 in. x 24 1/2 in. (749 mm x 622 mm), “Godwin liked Northcote’s portrait, describing it as ‘The principal memorandum of my corporal existence that will remain after my death.’ With the light hitting the philosopher’s temples, Northcote symbolised Godwin’s belief in progress based on reason.” (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

For four years Godwin raised “Pretty Little Mary” and her half-sister Fanny with the help of a governess. Mary thrived under her father’s affectionate care and grew into a “precocious, sensitive and spirited” little girl. But in 1801 he  married  Mary Jane Clairmont.  Little Mary did not get on well with her new “mother.” She grew up…

with a cruel step mother and emotionally distant father; she consoled herself at her mother’s graveside and spent periods of time in Scotland with friends of the family. [the Literary Network]

She was close to her half-sister Fanny and especially her step-sister Claire. But, while Claire was sent away to a boarding school to learn, Mary was left a home to learn what she could from the family library. Fortunately the library was well stocked, and her Father hosted a stream of literary visitors who sparked the girls’ imaginations. (Claire and Mary snuck into one such meeting and hid under a sofa so they could listen to Coleridge recite “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” [the Literary Network has a more detailed account of Mary’s early life and the strife between the girl and Mrs. Godwin.]

Percy Bysshe Shelley imbibed his radical philo...

Percy Bysshe Shelley imbibed his radical philosophy from William Godwin’s Political Justice. (Amelia Curran, 1819) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

At  16, after a return from a very happy holiday with her friends the Baxters in Scotland,  she met Percy Bysshe Shelly. Percy was 5 years her senior and established writer and rich. He came to the Godwin’s to talk to her father about politics and his philosophy.  Mary and Percy fell in love with each other. Unfortunately Percy was already married (unhappily) to Harriet  Westbrook. Regardless of his marital status Mary and Percy ran off to Europe with Claire in tow. Her father, who believed in free love for other people, was against it for his daughter, he refused to talk to Mary until she and Percy married several years later.

Godwin-Shelley family tree

Godwin-Shelley family tree (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The eight years Mary and Percy Shelley spent together were indeed characterized by romance and melodrama. During this period Mary and Percy, both extremely idealistic, lived on love–because of extended negotiations over the disposition of the estate of Percy’s grandfather–without money, constantly moving from one placed to another. Mary gave birth to four children, only one of whom survived to adulthood… [Eleanor Ty, Wilfrid Laurier University]

While at Lake Geneva they met Lord Byron. Byron and Claire became lovers and had a child of their own, Allegra.  Mary started work on Frankenstein while they were in Switzerland. It was inspired after a night of telling ghost stories.

Steel engraving (993 x 71mm) for frontispiece ...

Steel engraving (993 x 71mm) for frontispiece to the revised edition of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, published by Colburn and Bentley, London 1831. The novel was first published in 1818. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

As December 1816 loomed Harriet Westbrook Shelly committed suicide by walking into the Serpentine River near her home in Hyde Park. Unlike his relationship with Harriet, Percy found Mary an intellectual and romantic partner. With in the month Mary and Percy were married in London. They continued to travel, often with Byron, Claire and Allegra.

In 1822 Mary had a serious miscarriage and almost died. Later that year Percy was out sailing on the schooner “Don Juan’ when the boat sank in a sudden storm. Mary, devastated, returned to England with her only surviving son, Percy Florence.

The Cremation of Percy Bysshe Shelley, by Loui...

The Cremation of Percy Bysshe Shelley, by Louis Édouard Fournier. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

She died in 1851 at the age of 54.  Romantic legend has it that when her son and daughter-in-law opened her box desk they found locks of hair from her long dead children and a silk envelope containing the ashes of Percy’s “heart”.

Books by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelly include:

History of Six Weeks’ Tour though a Part of France, Switzerland, Germany and Holland

Frankenstein; or The Modern Prometheus

Mathilda

Valperga; or, The Life and Adventures of Castruccio, Prince of Lucca

The Last Man

the Fortunes of Perkin Warbeck

Ladore

Falkner

Rambles in Germany and Italy

and collections of poems of Percy Bysshe Shelly


Thought of the Day 8.28.12 Mary Norton

“I’m no lady; I’m a member of Congress, and I’ll proceed on that basis.”

–Mary Norton

Kathleen Mary Pearson was born on this day  in London, England in 1903. It is the 99th anniversary of her birth.

The Cedars, Church Square at the end of the Hi...

The Cedars, Church Square at the end of the High Street in Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire, England. Built in 1855 for Mr. John Dollin Bassett. Designed by W. C. Read. Current location of Leighton Middle School, and occupied by Cedars Upper School until 1973. Location: OSGB36: SP 919 249, WGS84: 51:54.9192N 0:39.8815W (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

She grew up in a large Georgian style house, called The Cedars, in Bedfordshire. She used the house as inspiration for her setting of The Borrowers.

During World War II she worked for the War Office and in 1941 she moved to New York as part of the British Purchasing Commission. It was while she was in New York that she started to write.

Cover of "Bonfires and Broomsticks"

Cover of Bonfires and Broomsticks

In 1943 she published The Magic Bed Knob; or, How to Become a Witch in Ten Easy Lessons. The book sold well and Norton followed it up with Bonfires and Broomsticks. The books were turned into a 1971 Disney film called Bedknobs and Broomsticks that combined live action with animation (something the studio first did in Mary Poppins.) The movie starred  Angela Lansbury as a novice witch determined to use her powers to help England in the war effort. It featured the charming music number “Portobello Road,” a memorable soccer game between wild (animated) animals, and concluded with an army (live action) of suits of army fighting the invading Germans.

In 1946 she married Robert Charles Norton with whom she had 4 children.

The Borrowers (TV miniseries)

The Borrowers (TV miniseries) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

In 1952 the first installment of her wildly popular The Borrowers series was published. It was followed by five more Borrowers novels. The books have been made into numerous stage shows,  movies and TV series.

Cover of "Are All the Giants Dead?"

Cover of Are All the Giants Dead?

 

In 1975 she wrote Are All the Giants Dead?

 


Celebrate Good Times, Come ON! 100 post!!!

 

Wordpress Button Closeup

WordPress Button Closeup (Photo credit: Titanas)

Instead of my usual Thought of the Day I wanted to share the exciting news that ritaLOVEStoWRITE has hit a milestone.  This is my 100th post on WordPress!

Thank you to all of the readers who have hit the blog 2,700 plus times in the last three months. And especially to my 57 dedicated followers (plus those 300 plus of you on Facebook and Twitter who follow that way.) Your LIKES, feedback and support have made these lonely hours in front of my computer well worth it.

Of course the act of researching, writing, adding the photos and editing the posts  has been its own reward. How else would I have found out about Mata Hari?

So, incase any one asks, here’s what rita WRITES about: 

 

I was somewhat surprised at how that broke down. While in the trenches of writing the blog I thought it weighed way to heavily on the celebrity and was too light on the cerebral, but actually I had more WRITERS than anyone else.

 

 

There was some nice cross over between Movies and Music (in Musical Theatre)…

 

The bulk of my 100 posts are in the Thought of the Day category, and the MISC. chart gives a who’s who of folks who didn’t fit nicely into Writing, Movies or Music. I liked the cross referencing here too.

 

 

The last chart is for post that didn’t appear as a Thought of the Day entry, “Original Non-Fiction.” Hmmm. Well everything on my blog is my original work (except one repost from my friend Lynn Reynolds about Books and How to Sell Them) and so far it has been all non-fiction. So I guess EVERYTHING could be on this chart.

In the future I hope to add some fiction to the site. Would you like that?

Please know that I love to get feedback, but I’m pretty fierce about SPAM. If there is any chance something is SPAM I throw it in the trash. So if I have inadvertently trashed your perfectly legitimate comment, I apologize. It was thrown into my SPAM folder and I probably couldn’t see your website to check. PLEASE write something referring back to “ritaLOVEStoWRITE” in your comment then I’ll know it is the real deal and not some bot trolling for unsuspecting bloggers.

I’ll leave you with a Thought for Today from Australian politician Arthur Calwell who was born on this day in 1896…

“It is better to be defeated on principle than to win on lies.”

Hmmm something to think about as the (American) political season goes super nova.


Thought of the Day 8.24.12 Stephen Fry

“It is a cliche that most cliches are true, but then like most cliches, that cliche is untrue”

Stephen Fry

Stephen John Fry was born on this day in Hampstead, London, England in 1957. He is 55 years old.

He grew up in Norfolk. He was expelled from several schools and got into trouble with the law as a teen. He served three months in Pucklechurch Prison after stealing a credit card from a family friend. But the stint in prison seemed enough to straighten him out. He went back to school, this time at City College of Norwith and promised to apply himself to his studies. He scored well enough in his Cambridge entrance exams to get a scholarship at Queens’ College in 1979. At Queens he joined the Cambridge Footlights Dramatic Club and met Emma Thompson and Hugh Laurie. He won a Fringe First Award for  Latin! or Tobacco and Boys  a play he wrote for Footlights.

He teamed up with Laurie  to for the comedy act A Bit of Fry & Laurie. The Duo turned the act into a television sketch comedy series that premiered on December 26, 1987 with a 36 minute pilot. It ran for four seasons (1-3 on BBC2; season 4 on the more mainstream BBC1). The show’s combination of satire, wordplay and innuendo made it very popular. The complete series is available on DVD and selected sketches have been collected in book form.

In 1984  Fry adapted Noel Gay’s Me and My Gal. It had an eight year, 3,303 performance run at the Adelphi Theatre in London’s West End (with Robert Lindsay and Emma Thompson in the cast.)  It hopped the pond and opened at Broadway’s Marquis Theatre  in 1986 where it ran for 1,420 shows and was nominated for 13 Tony Awards. It also made him rich.

Fry considers himself a writer first and a  comedian/ actor second. He has published four novels: Liar (1991), The Hippopotamus (1994), Making History:  A Novel (1997) and The Stars’ Tennis Balls (200). His biography, Moab is My Washpot came out in 1997.

Other television work include Lord Melchett  in Black-Adder II and Reginald Jeeves in  Jeeves and Wooster. On the Radio he worked on Loose Ends, Delve Special, This is David Lander, Saturday Night Fry, Absolute Power and was the voice of Winnie the Pooh. He also presented The Incomplete and Utter History of Classical Music, a 20 part review of music over the past millennium.

His film work goes back to 1985. He had was in the ensemble cast of Peter’s Friends (with Laurie and Thompson). He played Oscar Wilde in Wilde (1997). In Gosford Park he is the clueless Inspector Thompson. He’s the Cheshire Cat in Tim Burton’s 2010 Alice in Wonderland. You can catch him as the Master of Laketown in the upcoming The Hobbit: There and Back Again and as Sir Simon De Canterville in The Canterville Ghost. [The list of Fry’s television and film roles is quite long.  See his IMBD site for a more comprehensive look at this side of his career.)

Fry also has lent his talents to audio books. He read the film tie-in version of  Douglas Adam’s The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy (he also dubbed the voice of the Book and was the narrator for the movie ) in 2005. He’s recorded his own novels and works by A.A. Milne, Anthony Buckeridge and Roald Dahl. Most famously he is the voice for the English audio books for the Harry Potter novels by J.K.Rowling.

He embraces technology with both hands, and has said he’s never met a smart phone he didn’t buy. He is “deeply dippy for all things digital” and says he bought the third Macintosh computer sold in the UK (Douglas Adams beat him to the first two.) His Twitter account has passed the four million mark .

He is actively involved in a number of social issue (often promoting them with his Twitter account and on his website.)

[All images courtesy Last.fm where you can find lots more great photos of Stephen Fry.]


Thought of the Day 8.22.12 Dorothy Parker

“Beauty is only skin deep, but ugly goes clean to the bone”

–Dorothy Parker

Dorothy Rothschild was born on this day in West End, New Jersey in 1893. Today is the 119th anniversary of her birth.

She said she was “a late unexpected arrival in a loveless family.” Dottie’s mother, Annie, died when the little girl was only five. Her father, Jacob, remarried two years later. But Dottie hated his new wife, Eleanor. Instead of calling Eleanor ‘Mother’ or ‘Stepmother’ Dorothy would refer to her as ‘the housekeeper.’  Annie was Protestant and Jacob was Jewish, but Eleanor was a strict Roman Catholic, and little Dottie thought she was a religious fantastic. Dottie was sent to elementary school at the Convent of the Blessed Sacrament, something else she loathed. She got into trouble when she refered to the Immaculate Conception as “spontaneous combustion.” Of her education there she later remarked…

…as for helping me in the outside world, the Convent taught me only that if you spit on a pencil eraser, it will erase ink.

She went to Miss Dana’s School for Young Ladies, a private boarding and finishing school in Morristown, New Jersey.  Shortly after graduating finishing school she learned that her brother, Henry, died aboard the Titanic. A year later her father passed away.

Dorothy moved to New York where she wrote during the day and played piano at a dancing school at night until her career took off. In 1914 she sold her poem “Any Porch” to Vanity Fair for $12.  She worked for Vogue (a sister Conde Nast publication) writing fashion captions including such quips as “Brevity is the soul of lingerie.” Later she moved over to Vanity Fair where her managing editor, Frank Crowinshield said she had

 “the quickest tongue imaginable, and I need not to say the keenest sense of mockery.” [Poetry Hunter.com]

In 1917 she married a wall street stockbroker, Edwin Pond Parker II.  Edwin went off to serve in World War I. He was wounded in the War and came back an alcoholic and morphine addict. The marriage didn’t last long, but she kept his name for the rest of her life.

Dorothy took over as Theatre Critic for P.G. Woodhouse. She was the only female drama critic in New York at the time.  Her acerbic wit was evident in such reviews as “if you don’t knit, bring a book.” Parker was

“a firecracker who was aggressively proud of being tough, quirky, fiesty…and she managed to carry it off with style and humor.” [ Marion Meade, What Fresh Hell Is This]

the readers loved her, but the theater owners and producers were less than pleased. She crossed the line once too often and when she panned a big production she got fired from the drama desk.

The Algonquin Round Table in caricature by Al ...

The Algonquin Round Table in caricature by Al Hirschfeld. Seated at the table, clockwise from left: Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley, Alexander Woollcott, Heywood Broun, Marc Connelly, Franklin P. Adams, Edna Ferber, George S. Kaufman, Robert Sherwood. In back from left to right: frequent Algonquin guests Lynn Fontanne and Alfred Lunt, Vanity Fair editor Frank Crowninshield and Frank Case. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

In the 1920’s Dorothy was a founding member of the Algonquin Round Table, a group of  — mostly male — writers and friends known for their quick-witted quips. During this period she wrote her poem “News Item” which contains the iconic Parker line “Men seldom make passes at girls who wear glasses.”  She worked for various publications most notably The New Yorker. At the New Yorker she wrote book reviews (just as funny and acerbic as her drama reviews) from 1927-1933 under the pseudonym the “Constant Reader.” She continued to write poetry and short stories,a nd in 1929 her story “The Big Blonde” won the prestigious O. Henry award.

Also in 1929 she began to write screenplays. She was hired by MGM and moved to Hollywood.  In 1933 Parker met husband #2, Alan Campbell, another screenwriter and the two became both professional and romantic partners. They signed on with Paramount Pictures in 1935 and Parker got an Academy Award nomination as part of the screenwriting team that penned “A Star Is Born.”

George Platt Lynes took this portrait in 1943. [ courtesy Dorothy Parker’s World Online. ]

Parker used her pen to fight for social justice. She championed feminism, racial equity, and the fight against Fascism. She supported the International Brigade (along with Earnest Hemingway) in their fight against Franco in the Spanish Civil War. In 1936 she helped found the Anti Nazi League. She also joined the Communist Party, an act that got her black listed in the 1950’s.Starting in 1957 she wrote book reviews for Esquire magazine, and in 1959 she was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Parker had a dark side. She was an alcoholic and she attempted suicide on several occasions. In her poem Resume she wrote about suicide:

Razors pain you;
Rivers are damp;
Acids stain you;
And drugs cause cramp.
Guns aren't lawful;
Nooses give;
Gas smells awful;
You might as well live.

On June 7, 1967 Parker died of a heart attack in New York City.

————————————————————-

The Portable Dorothy Parker is available on Amazon.com.

Here are some more Dorothy Parker quotes: 

“She runs the gamut of emotions from A to B.”

The only ‘-ism’ Hollywood believes in is plagiarism.

Time wounds all heels.

I’d like to have money. And I’d like to be a good writer. These two can come together, and I hope they will, but if that’s too adorable, I’d rather have money.

Sorrow is tranquility remembered in emotion.

(In 1955) “Hollywood money isn’t money. It’s congealed snow, melts in your hand, and there you are.”

The best way to keep children at home is to make the home atmosphere pleasant, and let the air out of the tires.

One more drink and I’ll be under the the table, two more drinks and I’ll be under the host.

Scratch an actor – and you’ll find an actress.

Upon being told that former US President Calvin Coolidge (known as “Silent Cal” for being very tight-lipped) had died, she quipped, “How can they tell?”

He and I had an office so tiny that an inch smaller and it would have been adultery.

Excuse me, I have to use the toilet. Actually, I have to use the telephone, but I’m too embarrassed to say so.

People ought to be one of two things, young or dead.

On truth: Wit has truth in it; wisecracking is simply calisthenics with words.

“I’d rather have a bottle in front of me, than a frontal lobotomy.”

“This is not a novel to be tossed aside lightly. It should be thrown with great force.”

“You can drag a horticulture, but you can’t make her think.”

“Look at him, a rhinestone in the rough.”

“They sicken of the calm, who know the storm”

“This wasn’t just plain terrible, this was fancy terrible. This was terrible with raisins in it.”


Thought of the Day 8.8.12 Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings

“I do not know how anyone can live without some small place of enchantment to turn to.”

Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings

Rawlings in her garden.

Marjorie Kinnan was born on this day  in Washington D.C. in 1896. Today is the 116th anniversary of her birth.

She got her love of nature from her parents. Although her father was a principal examiner in the U.S. Patent Office, he was happiest when he was walking his Maryland farm. Her mother grew up on a farm in Southern Michigan, and Marjorie would spend summers at the family homestead. According to The Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Society website:

Living close to the land as she was growing up “planted deep in [her] a love of the soil, the crops, the seasons and a sense of kinship with men and women everywhere who live close to the soil”

At six she started to write short stories, some of which she submitted to the children’s section of the Washignton Post. At 15 her short story “The Reincarnation of  Miss Hetty” won a literary prize and Marjorie was hooked.

When she was 17 her father passed away and she moved with her mother to Wisconsin. She attended the University of Wisconsin and her works were published in  the Wisconsin Literary Magazine.  While at the University she met Charles Rawlings.

Rawlings in 1913.

After graduating with honors she moved to New York. She married Rawlings in 1919 and the couple moved to Louisville, Kentucky. They both wrote for the Louisville Courier-Journal (Charles was a features writer, Marjorie wrote the “Live Women in Louisville” column.  When they moved to Rochester, New York Marjorie wrote poems about cooking, mending, gardening, et ect. in the syndicated column  Songs of a Housewife.  It was distributed nationwide to 50 papers. She also worked  on a novel, Blood of My Blood.  The manuscript  for Blood was lost for years, and the novel wasn’t published until 2002, nearly sixty years after her death.)

The US Postal Service stamp

When her mother passed away in 1928 she left Marjorie a small inheritance and the couple purchased an orange grove named Cross Creek near Hawthorne, Florida.

“This was not the Gold coast of Florida. . . . It was a primitive section off the beaten path, where men hunted and fished and worked small groves and farms for a meager living. . . . And the country was beautiful, with its mysterious swamps, its palms, its great live oaks, dripping gray Spanish moss, its deer and bear and raccoons and panthers and reptiles” [The Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Society website]

Rawlings was smitten by the rough Floridian back wood and groves, and the people who lived there. She found a new voice as she began to chronicle their stories. Gal Young Un won the 1932 O Henry Award. She moved further into the “scrub” to research her novel South Moon Under. She stayed with Piety Fiddia and her son Leonard and learned how to kill rattlesnake and  to make moonshine. The book was a Pulitzer Prize finalist and Book-of-the Month Club selection.

But the Florida wild was not for Charles Rawlings and the couple divorced in 1933.

Cover of "The Yearling"

Cover of The Yearling

Rawlings wasn’t happy with her next novel, Golden Apples, which she called “interesting trash instead of literature.” But, in 1939, she rebounded with her follow-up novel, The Yearling. The Yearling is a coming of age tale about a back woods boy named Jody Baxter who adopts a fawn, Flag. The book earned Rawlings a Pulitzer Prize for Literature. MGM  made it into a major motion picture starring Gregory Peck as Jody’s kindly father “Penny” Baxter and Jane Wyman as his distant mother. (Both performers were nominated for Academy Awards).

Cover of "Cross Creek"

Cover of Cross Creek

The autobiographical Cross Creek hit in 1942. Upon reading it one critic called Rawlings a “female Thoreau.” It was a Book-of-the-Month Club pick and stayed at the top of the best sellers list for months. It was also published in a special armed forces edition for those serving overseas in WWII. According to Powells City of Books the novel tells the story…

of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings’s experiences in the remote Florida hamlet of Cross Creek, where she lived for thirteen years. From the daily labors of managing a seventy-two-acre orange grove to bouts with runaway pigs and a succession of unruly farmhands, Rawlings describes her life at the Creek with humor and spirit. Her tireless determination to overcome the challenges of her adopted home in the Florida backcountry, her deep-rooted love of the earth, and her genius for character and description result in a most delightful and heartwarming memoir.

Cover of "Cross Creek Cookery"

Cover of Cross Creek Cookery

She wrote Cross Creek Cookery as kind of a companion piece in 1942. She’d been so descriptive about the food in Cross Creek that the readers deluged her with request for recipes. She shrugged, remembered the old adage that if you “Scratch a cook and you get a recipe” and began work on Cross Creek Cookery. It’s been called “the classic book on southern cooking” and is filled with over 250 recipes from alligator-tail, hush-puppies, sweet potato pone, grits, and desserts like Deadly Southern Pecan Pie. Rawlings loved to cook and entertain for, as she said:

“Food imaginatively and lovingly prepared, and eaten in good company, warms the being with something more than mere intake of calories.”

She married Norton S. Baskin, a long time friend and business associate  in 1941.

Through out the 40’s she worked on her last book The Sojourner. Rawlings leaves Florida behind and sets The Sojourner in Michigan. Good Reads gives this synopsis of the book:

The Sojourner is the story of a good man: of the influence of his steady, quiet strength upon others, especially the members of his immediate family, and of what they–characters less strong and less stable–do to him throughout the course of a long life.

She bought a farm-house in Upstate New York to aid in the research of the book. It was published in 1953.

Cross Creek

[All photos are courtesy of the Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings: Author of The Yearling site. Click on the link to see many more photos of Cross Creek, Mrs. Rawlings, her articles and book covers.)