John Cheever's Relationship with the American Magazine Marketplace, 1930 to 1964

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

John Cheever's Relationship with the American Magazine Marketplace, 1930 to 1964 View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Nottingham ePrints Monkman, James (2015) John Cheever's relationship with the American magazine marketplace, 1930 to 1964. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Access from the University of Nottingham repository: http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31066/1/James%20Monkman%20PhD%20Thesis %20Corrected%20and%20Redacted%20pdf%20%281%29.pdf Copyright and reuse: The Nottingham ePrints service makes this work by researchers of the University of Nottingham available open access under the following conditions. · Copyright and all moral rights to the version of the paper presented here belong to the individual author(s) and/or other copyright owners. · To the extent reasonable and practicable the material made available in Nottingham ePrints has been checked for eligibility before being made available. · Copies of full items can be used for personal research or study, educational, or not- for-profit purposes without prior permission or charge provided that the authors, title and full bibliographic details are credited, a hyperlink and/or URL is given for the original metadata page and the content is not changed in any way. · Quotations or similar reproductions must be sufficiently acknowledged. Please see our full end user licence at: http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/end_user_agreement.pdf A note on versions: The version presented here may differ from the published version or from the version of record. If you wish to cite this item you are advised to consult the publisher’s version. Please see the repository url above for details on accessing the published version and note that access may require a subscription. For more information, please contact [email protected] JOHN CHEEVER’S RELATIONSHIP WITH THE AMERICAN MAGAZINE MARKETPLACE, 1930 to 1964 JAMES RICHARD MONKMAN Thesis submitted to the University of Nottingham for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy September 2015 Abstract John Cheever published over two hundred short stories in an array of small-, mid-, and large-circulation magazines between 1930 and 1981. One hundred and twenty of these stories appeared in The New Yorker. During Cheever’s career and since his death in 1982, many critics have typically analysed his short stories in isolation from the conditions of their production, lest Cheever’s subversive modernist tendencies be confused with the conservative middlebrow ethos of The New Yorker, or the populist aspect of other large- circulation magazines. Critics, including Cheever’s daughter and his most recent biographer Blake Bailey, also claim that Cheever was a financial and, ultimately, artistic victim of the magazine marketplace. Drawing on largely unpublished editorial and administrative correspondence in the New Yorker Records and editorially annotated short story typescripts in the John Cheever Literary Manuscripts collection, and using a historicised close-reading practice, this thesis examines the influence of the magazine marketplace on the short fiction that Cheever produced between 1930 and 1964. It challenges the critical consensus by arguing that Cheever did not dissociate his authorship from commerciality at any point during his career, and consistently exploited the magazine marketplace to his financial and creative advantage, whether this meant temporarily producing stories for little magazines in the early 1930s and romance stories for mainstream titles in the 1940s, or selling his New Yorker rejections to its rivals, which he did throughout his career. Cheever also developed strong working relationships with his editors at The New Yorker during the 1940s and 1950s. This thesis re-evaluates these relationships by analysing comparatively the drafts, archival materials that have hitherto been neglected by critics, and published versions of some of Cheever’s best known New Yorker stories. In so doing, this thesis demonstrates the crucial role that editorial collaboration played in Cheever’s writing process. Acknowledgements I would like to thank the AHRC for funding three years of my PhD studies and awarding me a travel grant to travel to New York in 2013 to conduct research in the New Yorker Records at the New York Public Library. Thanks to CLAS, my parent school, for awarding me two Travel Prizes during the course of my PhD. These prizes enabled me to examine the John Cheever Literary Manuscripts at Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts in 2012, and the New Yorker Records in 2013. Thanks also to the editors of Critique: Journal of Socialist Theory for publishing a shorter version of the first chapter of this thesis in the Spring 2015 issue of the journal. I am indebted to my supervisors Professor Judie Newman and Dr. Graham Thompson for their unwavering support and guidance throughout this process. Thanks to the staff that assisted me during my time in the New York Public Library’s Manuscripts and Archives Division and the Robert D. Farber University Archives & Special Collections Department at Brandeis. Sarah M. Shoemaker and Anne Woodrum were especially kind and helpful towards me while I was researching at Brandeis, and have, along with their team, continued to support me ever since by answering my questions and providing me with additional archival materials. Thanks also to my partner Jen, my parents, my brothers, my closest colleague at the University of Nottingham, John Tiplady, and practically everyone else I know for supporting me emotionally, intellectually, and financially throughout this process. This work is dedicated, with love, to Michael ‘Mick’ Hall (1976-2013). Thank you for helping me to negotiate the wilderness of my mid-twenties and encouraging me to pursue my passion for literature. Contents Introduction…………………………………………………………………………………1 Chapter One: ‘Go Left, Young Writer’: John Cheever and the Writing of ‘Fall River’, 1931………………………………………………………………………………………..20 Chapter Two: ‘And then I sold a mediocre story for forty-five dollars’: John Cheever and the Economics of Writing Short Fiction, 1930 to 1964…………………………………...58 Chapter Three: Compromised Fiction: The Editing of John Cheever’s ‘Torch Song’, March to July 1947………………………………………………………………………131 Chapter Four: The Reforming of ‘The Housebreaker of Shady Hill’ by John Cheever and The New Yorker, 1955 to 1956…………………………………………………………..162 Conclusion……………………………………………………………………………….223 Appendix…………………………………………………………………………………239 Bibliography……………………………………………………………………………..249 1 Introduction For most of his professional career, John Cheever was both a literary artist and a popular writer. Cheever came to rely on writing short stories for a mixture of small-, mid-, and large-circulation magazines between 1930 and the early 1960s because of his lack of financial independence and struggle with the novel form. It was by publishing the majority of his stories in The New Yorker that Cheever was able to develop both aspects of his career. This thesis proposes that understanding the nature of the creative and financial relationships that Cheever developed with The New Yorker and its employees during this period, as well as his other interactions with the American magazine marketplace, broadens our understanding both of his sense of literary professionalism and, moreover, his approach to writing short fiction. Using a historicised close reading of mostly unpublished editorial and interoffice correspondence in the New Yorker Records, and short story typescripts in the John Cheever Literary Manuscripts, this thesis argues that Cheever was not, as some critics have suggested, a victim of the magazine marketplace, but rather a willing, if occasionally frustrated, participant in it. Cheever published one hundred and twenty of his short stories in The New Yorker between 1935 and 1981. From the late 1940s until his death in 1982, Cheever signed a first-reading agreement annually with The New Yorker which provided him with something approaching the stability and security of regular extra- or non-literary employment. This agreement was invaluable to Cheever because it enabled him to make writing his job in the absence of novel publication early in his career. Moreover, appearing in The New Yorker on average every other month in the 1940s provided Cheever with a national, primarily middle-class, audience for his stories, and within that whole, a readership for the books he began to publish with more frequency in the late 1950s and 2 throughout the 1960s. Cheever also formed strong professional and personal bonds with New Yorker editors William Maxwell and Gustave S. Lobrano. Both of these editors became, at different times, stylistically influential collaborators on Cheever’s stories during the most prolific period of his career, 1940 to 1964. When critics attempt to separate Cheever’s short fiction from The New Yorker, they often emphasise his circumvention of, or conflict with, its middlebrow literary ethos and editing system. Susan Cheever claimed that her father’s association with The New Yorker deteriorated because of his experimentation in his short stories with what his editors felt was ‘appropriate and believable’ for the magazine’s readers.1 Cheever’s first biographer Scott Donaldson acknowledged that The New Yorker was a ‘patron to […] Cheever for four decades’ but refused to accept that he consciously authored New Yorker stories, cultural products that Donaldson dismissed as being ‘elegant, charming, [and] inconsequential’.2 Agreeing with Susan Cheever’s portrayal of her father as a surrealist, Wayne
Recommended publications
  • AP English Literature and Composition: Study Guide
    AP English Literature and Composition: Study Guide AP is a registered trademark of the College Board, which was not involved in the production of, and does not endorse, this product. Key Exam Details While there is some degree of latitude for how your specific exam will be arranged, every AP English Literature and Composition exam will include three sections: • Short Fiction (45–50% of the total) • Poetry (35–45% of the total) • Long Fiction or Drama (15–20% of the total) The AP examination will take 3 hours: 1 hour for the multiple-choice section and 2 hours for the free response section, divided into three 40-minute sections. There are 55 multiple choice questions, which will count for 45% of your grade. The Free Response writing component, which will count for 55% of your grade, will require you to write essays on poetry, prose fiction, and literary argument. The Free Response (or “Essay” component) will take 2 hours, divided into the three sections of 40 minutes per section. The course skills tested on your exam will require an assessment and explanation of the following: • The function of character: 15–20 % of the questions • The psychological condition of the narrator or speaker: 20–25% • The design of the plot or narrative structure: 15–20% • The employment of a distinctive language, as it affects imagery, symbols, and other linguistic signatures: 10–15% • And encompassing all of these skills, an ability to draw a comparison between works, authors and genres: 10–15 % The free response portion of the exam will test all these skills, while asking for a thesis statement supported by an argument that is substantiated by evidence and a logical arrangement of the salient points.
    [Show full text]
  • Download File
    The Outward Turn: Personality, Blankness, and Allure in American Modernism Anne Claire Diebel Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2013 © 2013 Anne Claire Diebel All rights reserved ABSTRACT The Outward Turn: Personality, Blankness, and Allure in American Modernism Anne Claire Diebel The history of personality in American literature has surprisingly little to do with the differentiating individuality we now tend to associate with the term. Scholars of nineteenth- and twentieth-century American culture have defined personality either as the morally vacuous successor to the Protestant ideal of character or as the equivalent of mass-media celebrity. In both accounts, personality is deliberately constructed and displayed. However, hiding in American writings of the long modernist period (1880s–1940s) is a conception of personality as the innate capacity, possessed by few, to attract attention and elicit projection. Skeptical of the great American myth of self-making, such writers as Henry James, Theodore Dreiser, Gertrude Stein, Nathanael West, and Langston Hughes invented ways of representing individuals not by stable inner qualities but by their fascinating—and, often, gendered and racialized—blankness. For these writers, this sense of personality was not only an important theme and formal principle of their fiction and non-fiction writing; it was also a professional concern made especially salient by the rise of authorial celebrity. This dissertation both offers an alternative history of personality in American literature and culture and challenges the common critical assumption that modernist writers took the interior life to be their primary site of exploration and representation.
    [Show full text]
  • Yaddo News Release
    Yaddo News Release Contact: Tristan Kirvin ▪ 518-584-0746 ▪ [email protected] YADDO RECEIVES $250,000 GIFT FROM HELEN FRANKENTHALER FOUNDATION FOR FUNDING OF NEW LIVE-WORK VISUAL ARTS STUDIO Saratoga Springs, NY, December 3, 2015 …Yaddo, one of the nation’s oldest artist communities, announced today that it has received a $250,000 gift from the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation to underwrite the cost of a new live-work studio for a visual artist. The studio is one of five currently under construction on the 400-acre estate, a National Historic Landmark that welcomes over 200 artists working in a variety of disciplines each year. The visual arts studio will be named in Frankenthaler’s honor. “This gift is deeply meaningful to us in a number of ways,” said Yaddo President Elaina Richardson. “It helps to underscore our rich legacy of hosting incredibly talented visual artists at various stages in their careers, from emerging artists to those who are world-renowned, such as Helen Frankenthaler. The gift also confirms a core fact—the artists who know us best have been remarkable supporters of Yaddo and are the reason we’re poised for a vibrant second century. We are grateful to the Frankenthaler Foundation’s Board and leadership for their generosity, and honored by the trust they have placed in us.” Helen Frankenthaler’s association with Yaddo extended over many years, and included serving on the community’s Board of Trustees from 1973 to 1978. In addition to providing generous financial support for Yaddo, she additionally served on visual arts admissions panels and was actively involved in the recruitment of artists.
    [Show full text]
  • Addition to Summer Letter
    May 2020 Dear Student, You are enrolled in Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition for the coming school year. Bowling Green High School has offered this course since 1983. I thought that I would tell you a little bit about the course and what will be expected of you. Please share this letter with your parents or guardians. A.P. Literature and Composition is a year-long class that is taught on a college freshman level. This means that we will read college level texts—often from college anthologies—and we will deal with other materials generally taught in college. You should be advised that some of these texts are sophisticated and contain mature themes and/or advanced levels of difficulty. In this class we will concentrate on refining reading, writing, and critical analysis skills, as well as personal reactions to literature. A.P. Literature is not a survey course or a history of literature course so instead of studying English and world literature chronologically, we will be studying a mix of classic and contemporary pieces of fiction from all eras and from diverse cultures. This gives us an opportunity to develop more than a superficial understanding of literary works and their ideas. Writing is at the heart of this A.P. course, so you will write often in journals, in both personal and researched essays, and in creative responses. You will need to revise your writing. I have found that even good students—like you—need to refine, mature, and improve their writing skills. You will have to work diligently at revising major essays.
    [Show full text]
  • Books and Coffee Past Presenters
    Books and Coffee Past Presenters Year Speaker Author Title 1951 William Braswell Hemingway Across the River and Into the Trees Chester Eisinger Miller Death of a Salesman Paul Fatout -- “Mark Twain” Robert Lowe Pound Letters Barriss Mills Faulkner Collected Stories Herbert Muller Niebuhr Faith in History Albert Rolfs Fatout Ambrose Bierce Louise Rorabacher Orwell Animal Farm Emerson Sutcliffe Kent Declensions in the Air 1952 Welsey Carroll Boswell London Journal Richard Voorhees Greene The Power and the Glory Richard Cordell Irvine The Universe of George Bernard Shaw Harold Watts Mann The Holy Sinner Roy Curtis Hall Leave Your Language Alone! Richard Greene Altick The Scholar Adventurers R. W. Babcock -- “On Reading Shakespeare” Richard Crowder Williams Later Collected Poems 1953 Herbert Muller Ceram Gods, Graves, and Scholars William Hastings Wouk The Cain Mutiny J. H. McKee Ferril I Hate Thursday Arthur Koenig Dostoievsky The Diary of a Writer George Schick Boswell Boswell in Holland Darrel Abel Steinbeck East of Eden H. B. Knoll Walton The Compleat Angler Raymond Himelick Cabell Quiet Please 1954 Paul Fatout Boswell Boswell on the Grand Tour George S. Wykoff Bonavia-Hunt Pemberley Shades Lewis Freed Eliot The Cocktail Party R. M. Bertram Cary The Horse's Mouth Laird Bell Smith Man and His Gods Bernard Schmidt Michener The Bridges at Toki-Ri Victor Gibbens Randolf & Wilson Down in the Holler William Braswell Thurber Thurber Country 1955 Richard Cordell Larson An American in Europe Arnold Drew Jarrell Pictures from an Institution Russell Cosper Kafka The Castle M. W. Tillson Ives Tales of America Maurice Beebe Faulkner A Fable Walter Maneikis Algren The Man with the Golden Arm Virgil Lokke West The Day of the Locusts Robert Ogle White The Second Tree from the Corner 1956 Lewis Freed Alberto Moravia A Ghost at Noon R.W.
    [Show full text]
  • Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Rabbit Run by John Updike Rabbit Run by John Updike
    Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Rabbit Run by John Updike Rabbit Run by John Updike. Completing the CAPTCHA proves you are a human and gives you temporary access to the web property. What can I do to prevent this in the future? If you are on a personal connection, like at home, you can run an anti-virus scan on your device to make sure it is not infected with malware. If you are at an office or shared network, you can ask the network administrator to run a scan across the network looking for misconfigured or infected devices. Another way to prevent getting this page in the future is to use Privacy Pass. You may need to download version 2.0 now from the Chrome Web Store. Cloudflare Ray ID: 6588763ffc5c0d52 • Your IP : 188.246.226.140 • Performance & security by Cloudflare. Rabbit Run by John Updike. Completing the CAPTCHA proves you are a human and gives you temporary access to the web property. What can I do to prevent this in the future? If you are on a personal connection, like at home, you can run an anti-virus scan on your device to make sure it is not infected with malware. If you are at an office or shared network, you can ask the network administrator to run a scan across the network looking for misconfigured or infected devices. Another way to prevent getting this page in the future is to use Privacy Pass. You may need to download version 2.0 now from the Chrome Web Store. Cloudflare Ray ID: 65887640090515f4 • Your IP : 188.246.226.140 • Performance & security by Cloudflare.
    [Show full text]
  • Literary Skirmish Over Hiss
    T SDA:Y;J Above photos he Assoateted Pre se: ROght photo from the dust Jacket or "Perim's,: The Hiss-Chambers Case" Then-Rep. Richard Nixon, above left. Whittaker Chambers and Alger Hiss, right. Far right, Allen Weinstein. Entertainment / People / The Arts APRIL 6, 1978 B1 A Literary Skirmish Over Hiss Attack and Counterattack, in a Battle Fought for 30 Years And so, Alistair Cooke's comment By Michael Kernan that the case put "a generation on trial" continues to reverberate. The Hiss-Chambers affair is 30 Years old and heading into its second Weinstein's book, five years in the generation — and people who were in writing, draws on a huge mass of new knee pants when it began still get material — 30,000 pages of FBI and fighting mad over It. Justice Department records, Inter- views with former Soviet spymasters The latest episode on Publishers and other figures — so overwhelming, Row is the lead article in the April 8 Weinstein says, that he himself Nation magazine, titled "The Case switched from his initial belief in Not Proved Against Alger Hiss, an In- Hiss' innocence. vestigation by Victor Navasky." It consists of an attack on Allen Wein- And now Navasky attacks the 40- stein's just-published book, which con- year-old Smith College historian with cludes that Hiss was "guilty as a series of statements by Weinstein charged" of perjury. interviewees denying some of the things that the book has them saying. And Weinsteln's book, "Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case," followed I sent Xeroxed galleys to the on the heels of another book, by John sources for some of Weinsteins most Chabot Smith.
    [Show full text]
  • Philip Roth Biography Appeared Before the Book Came Out, with Major Stories in Magazines and Literary Publications
    Sexual Assault Allegations Against Biographer Halt Shipping of His Roth Book W.W. Norton, citing the accusations that the author, Blake Bailey, faces, said it would stop shipping and promoting his new best-selling book. “Philip Roth: The Biography” went on sale earlier this month.Credit...W.W. Norton, via Associated Press By Alexandra Alter and Rachel Abrams Published April 21, 2021Updated May 17, 2021 Earlier this month, the biographer Blake Bailey was approaching what seemed like the apex of his literary career. Reviews of his highly anticipated Philip Roth biography appeared before the book came out, with major stories in magazines and literary publications. It landed on the New York Times best-seller list this week. Now, allegations against Mr. Bailey, 57, have emerged, including claims that he sexually assaulted two women, one as recently as 2015, and that he behaved inappropriately toward middle school students when he was a teacher in the 1990s. His publisher, W.W. Norton, took swift and unusual action: It said on Wednesday that it had stopped shipments and promotion of his book. “These allegations are serious,” it said in a statement. “In light of them, we have decided to pause the shipping and promotion of ‘Philip Roth: The Biography’ pending any further information that may emerge.” Norton, which initially printed 50,000 copies of the title, has stopped a 10,000-copy second printing that was scheduled to arrive in early May. It has also halted advertising and media outreach, and events that Norton arranged to promote the book are being canceled. The pullback from the publisher came just days after Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • A Celebration of the Yale Collection of American Literature, 1911–2011 on View at Beinecke Library, Yale University, July 8 Through October 1, 2011
    Multitudes: A Celebration of the Yale Collection of American Literature, 1911–2011 On view at Beinecke Library, Yale University, July 8 through October 1, 2011 Checklist and Descriptions: Literary Intellectuals at Yale *** Literary Intellectuals at Yale Among the Collection’s holdings of literary archives are the papers of numerous twentieth- century literary critics, great intellectuals of their time. Chief among these holdings is the Robert Penn Warren Papers, consisting of 145 linear feet of manuscript drafts, correspondence, and personal papers, all from the desk of poet, novelist, and critic Robert Penn Warren. Warren, known to most as “Red,” began his career as an undergraduate at Vanderbilt University, where he became closely involved with the Fugitives, a group of Southern poets and literary critics. He joined the English faculty at Yale in 1950 and was instrumental in the development of the American Studies program. His third novel, the political thriller All the King’s Men (1946), won him his first Pulitzer Prize. He received subsequent Pulitzer Prizes for two volumes of poetry, Promises (1958) and Now and Then (1979), and in 1986 became Poet Laureate of the United States. His papers contain rich correspondence with literary heavyweights such as William Faulkner, Harold Bloom, John Cheever, Lillian Hellman, John Hollander, Katherine Anne Porter, John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate, and Eudora Welty. Yale literary traditions remain central to the Yale Collection of American Literature; in recent years, the Library has added the archives of Yale poets Robert Fitzgerald, Louise Glück, John Hollander, and J. D. McClatchy. *** Robert Penn Warren, To a Little Girl, One Year Old, In a Ruined Fortress (New Haven: Yale School of Design, 1956).
    [Show full text]
  • Carey Mcwilliams Papers, 1894-1982 (Bulk 1921-1980)
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf1779n6sf No online items Finding Aid for the Carey McWilliams Papers, 1894-1982 (bulk 1921-1980) Processed by Andrea Eitsert, with assistance from Laurel McPhee; machine-readable finding aid created by Caroline Cubé UCLA Library, Department of Special Collections Manuscripts Division Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA 90095-1575 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/special/scweb/ © 1999 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Finding Aid for the Carey 1319 1 McWilliams Papers, 1894-1982 (bulk 1921-1980) Finding Aid for the Carey McWilliams Papers, 1894-1982 (bulk 1921-1980) Collection number: 1319 UCLA Library, Department of Special Collections Manuscripts Division Los Angeles, CA Contact Information Manuscripts Division UCLA Library, Department of Special Collections Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA 90095-1575 Telephone: 310/825-4988 (10:00 a.m. - 4:45 p.m., Pacific Time) Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/special/scweb/ Processed by: Andrea Eitsert, with assistance from Laurel McPhee, Winter 2006 Encoded by: Caroline Cubé Online finding aid edited by: Josh Fiala, March 2002 and Caroline Cubé, June 2006 © 1999 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Descriptive Summary Title: Carey McWilliams Papers, Date (inclusive): 1894-1982 (bulk 1921-1980) Collection number: 1319 Creator: McWilliams, Carey, 1905- Extent: 80 boxes (40 linear ft.)11 oversize boxes repository: University of California, Los Angeles. Library. Department of Special Collections.
    [Show full text]
  • Pulitzer Prize
    1946: no award given 1945: A Bell for Adano by John Hersey 1944: Journey in the Dark by Martin Flavin 1943: Dragon's Teeth by Upton Sinclair Pulitzer 1942: In This Our Life by Ellen Glasgow 1941: no award given 1940: The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck 1939: The Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Prize-Winning 1938: The Late George Apley by John Phillips Marquand 1937: Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell 1936: Honey in the Horn by Harold L. Davis Fiction 1935: Now in November by Josephine Winslow Johnson 1934: Lamb in His Bosom by Caroline Miller 1933: The Store by Thomas Sigismund Stribling 1932: The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck 1931 : Years of Grace by Margaret Ayer Barnes 1930: Laughing Boy by Oliver La Farge 1929: Scarlet Sister Mary by Julia Peterkin 1928: The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder 1927: Early Autumn by Louis Bromfield 1926: Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis (declined prize) 1925: So Big! by Edna Ferber 1924: The Able McLaughlins by Margaret Wilson 1923: One of Ours by Willa Cather 1922: Alice Adams by Booth Tarkington 1921: The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton 1920: no award given 1919: The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington 1918: His Family by Ernest Poole Deer Park Public Library 44 Lake Avenue Deer Park, NY 11729 (631) 586-3000 2012: no award given 1980: The Executioner's Song by Norman Mailer 2011: Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan 1979: The Stories of John Cheever by John Cheever 2010: Tinkers by Paul Harding 1978: Elbow Room by James Alan McPherson 2009: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout 1977: No award given 2008: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz 1976: Humboldt's Gift by Saul Bellow 2007: The Road by Cormac McCarthy 1975: The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara 2006: March by Geraldine Brooks 1974: No award given 2005: Gilead by Marilynne Robinson 1973: The Optimist's Daughter by Eudora Welty 2004: The Known World by Edward P.
    [Show full text]
  • Our Playwrights in the Spotlight Tony Nods, Rave Reviews, and The
    NEWS | SUMMER 2017 inside: Our Playwrights in the Spotlight James Baldwin is Having a Moment The Yaddo Summer Reading List Tony nods, rave reviews, and the premieres Thirty years after his death, the radical prophet of a With a bumper crop of new releases, our we’re looking forward to this fall generation is the hottest writer in America authors have you covered for beach season Our Playwrights Step Into the Spotlight t has been a banner year thus far for Yaddo dramatists both on and off Broadway. Leading the pack is J.T. Rogers, whose magnificent Oslo JENNY ANDERSON JENNY opened at Lincoln Center’s Vivian IBeaumont Theater in April to rave reviews and went on to win the 2017 Tony for Best Play. Directed by Bartlett Scher and starring Broadway vets Jennifer Ehle and Jefferson Mays, Rogers’s “colossus” of a play (so labeled by New York Times theater critic Ben Brantley) depicts the behind-the-scenes intrigue of the secret peace talks between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization that led to the 1993 Oslo Accords. Another late-season standout was War Paint, a triumphant collaboration between three Yaddo alums — Doug Wright (book), Scott Frankel (music) and Michael Korie (lyrics) — that garnered nominations ABOVE: J.T. Rogers and the cast of his Tony-award winning Oslo for best leading actress in a musical (double honor to Tony-Award grand dames Patti legend Paula Vogel’s elegiac Indecent writer Danny Rubin celebrated his first Tony LuPone and Christine Ebersole, playing (first staged at the Yale Repertory Theater nomination, for Best Book of a Musical, cosmetic industry rivals Helena Rubinstein in 2015) picked up a Best Play Tony for Groundhog Day, his adaptation of the and Elizabeth Arden), best costume design, nomination as well as awards for screenplay he co-wrote with Harold and best scenic design.
    [Show full text]