“Writing
is a solitary occupation. Family, friends, and society are the natural enemies
of the writer. He must be alone, uninterrupted, and slightly savage if he is to
sustain and complete an undertaking.”— Jessamyn West
Mary
“Jessamyn” West, born on this date in 1902, was an American author of short
stories and novels, notably The Friendly Persuasion. Her stories, although shaped by her
imagination, are loosely based on tales told to her by her mother and
grandmother about their Quaker farm life in rural Indiana.
It’s interesting also to note that
her grandmother also was the grandmother of Richard Nixon and to observe the
divergent paths the cousins took to fame.
While Nixon was serving as vice president, West’s best-selling novel
became an Academy Award-nominated movie.
Then, her sequel titled Except for
Me and Thee, another best-seller, came out at the same time that Nixon
became President. That book, too, became
a successful movie.
almost all of her 21 novels are about Indiana, a state in which
she did not live and seldom visited.
"I write about Indiana because knowing little
about it, I can create it from the images I’ve learned from my grandmother’s
stories. The past is really almost as
much a work of the imagination as the future.”
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