Monday
Aug. 2, 1999
A Bookmark
Poem: "A Bookmark," by Thomas Disch, from Yes! Let's: New and Selected Poems (Johns Hopkins University Press).
It's novelist BEVERLY COYLE's birthday, in Miami, 1946. She started off as a professor at Vassar writing scholarly works on poet Wallace Stevens. After being accidentally given a creative writing course to teach, she became interested in writing fiction. She said she noticed that her students very rarely wrote stories with a strong sense of place, so as an experiment, she started writing about her own growing up in small-town Florida in the 1950s. Coyle's wrote, In Troubled Waters, The Kneeling Bus, and her latest novel, Taken In, came out last summer.
It's the birthday in Lima, Peru, 1942, of writer ISABEL ALLENDE, author of The House of the Spirits, which came out in 1982. She had been working as a journalist in Chile since her late teens, but turned to writing fiction in her thirties. In 1973 her uncle, the Chilean president Salvador Allende Gossens, was assassinated. She fled to Venezuela, and then began The House of the Spirits. Other novels followed, one about every other year: Of Love and Shadows, Eva Luna, and The Infinite Plan.
It's the birthday in 1935, Oneonta, New York, of writer MITCHELL SMITH, author of two series of books: the Buckskin Westerns that came out in the 1980s written under the pen name of Roy LeBeau, (including the novel Trigger Spring), and thrillers Sacrifice and Stone City. Smith's new novel, Reprisal, just came out in May.
It's poet STEPHEN SANDY's birthday, in Minneapolis, 1934, whose collection Roofs was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in 1971; also the author of the 1988 collection, Man In the Open Air, and 1992's Thanksgiving Over the Water. His latest collection, Black Box, came out this spring.
It's the birthday in New York, 1924, of writer JAMES BALDWIN, who grew up in Harlem and spent some of his teen years as a revivalist preacher, then later put those experiences in his first book, the semi-autobiographical novel Go Tell It on the Mountain (1953). When he was in his twenties he moved to Paris, where he completed his essay collection, Notes of a Native Son.
It was on this day, in 1921, that Enrico Caruso died at the Hotel Vesuvio in Naples when he was only forty-eight. He died of peritonitis and sepsis after receiving several operations. The King of Italy allowed the funeral to be held in the basilica of San Francesco di Paola in Naples, which was normally reserved for royalty.
Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.®