“Citizenship
is a tough occupation which obliges the citizen to make his own informed
opinion and stand by it.” – Martha Gellhorn
Gellhorn was born in St. Louis on this date in 1908. And while she was raised in the heartland of America she became a product of and reporter on
the world; doing some of the finest reporting, news and feature writing ever done by
an American journalist.
She wrote about every topic from government to society, but it was
her war correspondence for which she is most noted, reporting on every
major world conflict
that took place during her 60-year career (she died in 1998 at age 90). In 1999 The Martha Gellhorn Prize in
Journalism (given annually for reporting excellence) was established in her
memory and honor.
Along the way she also became a part
of the lore surrounding Ernest Hemingway, ultimately becoming his third
wife. Both were reporters on the Spanish Civil War and World War II, although it may have been their competition as writers
that eventually caused them to drift apart.
Gellhorn brought new passion and
depth to her war coverage stories. Her
book, The Face of War, is one of the
best you’ll ever read about this remarkable reporter’s work. It’s both a chronicle and a primer on
effectively writing about conflict, its terrors, and aftermath.
she also published books of fiction, did travel writing and
wrote reams of correspondence. Her
selected letters were published posthumously in 2006.
“I have no intention,”
she once stated, “of being a footnote in someone else’s life.”
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