Susan’s Almanac Project for November 6, 2019

By |2019-11-06T14:42:43+00:00November 6th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Michael Cunningham (b. 1952), best known for his novel The Hours (1998), the story of three women across generations who are all somehow connected to Virginia Woolf’s novel Mrs. Dalloway. The Hours won the Pulitzer and the PEN/Faulkner Award in 1999 and was adapted for film in 2002 with Nicole Kidman, [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for November 4, 2019

By |2019-11-04T15:15:33+00:00November 4th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Charles Frazier (b. 1950), who is best known for his first novel, Cold Mountain (1997), which won the National Book Award and was an international bestseller, and who was offered an $8 million advance for his second novel, which in the world of authorship is considered quite good. Frazier was born [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 31, 2019

By |2019-10-31T20:14:11+00:00October 31st, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Dick Francis (1920-2010, #nicelonglife), who not only wrote 42 bestselling crime novels but is the only author I can think of who had a successful career as a steeplechase jockey. (Besides Jane Austen.) Francis was born in the village of Lawrenny, Wales, and grew to the robust size of five foot [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 29, 2019

By |2019-10-29T14:14:42+00:00October 29th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of James Boswell (1740-1795), who wrote what is considered to be the greatest biography in the English language, Life of Samuel Johnson (2 volumes, 1791), which broke with boring old staid tradition by incorporating actual conversations Boswell had with Johnson and bringing the man to life with vivid personal details. Boswell was [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 28, 2019

By |2019-10-28T14:45:35+00:00October 28th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966), heralded by Graham Greene as “the greatest novelist of my generation” and best known (in the U.S. anyway) for his novel Brideshead Revisited: The Sacred & Profane Memories of Captain Charles Ryder (1945). Fun, possibly offensive fact: Brideshead Revisited was famously adapted for television in 1981 and prompted [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 25, 2019

By |2019-10-25T16:33:45+00:00October 25th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of John Berryman (1914-1972), one of the most important poets of the confessional school, which included Sylvia Plath, Robert Lowell, and several other cheerful people. Berryman was erudite, given to self-destructive behavior, and as a poet was “disciplined, yet bohemian” (Robert Lowell). Berryman was born in McAlester, Oklahoma, and lived in Anadarko, [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 23, 2019

By |2019-10-23T14:05:03+00:00October 23rd, 2019|

It’s the birthday of the frankly astounding Canadian author Gordan Korman (b. 1963), who wrote his first book when he was 12, got it published by Scholastic at 14, published four more and was a bestselling author by high school graduation, and had 10 books published with more than a million copies sold by 21. [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 22, 2019

By |2019-10-22T13:06:56+00:00October 22nd, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Doris Lessing (1919-2013), whose novels and stories broke literary ground in their daring explorations of racism, women’s inner lives, sex, mental illness, and all manner of upheaval known to humankind. Lessing was best known for her semi-autobiographical and experimental novel The Golden Notebook (1962) and was awarded the Nobel in Lit [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 21, 2019

By |2019-10-21T14:56:49+00:00October 21st, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Ursula K. Le Guin (1929-2018), whose speculative fiction had both vast commercial success and strong literary cred and who is perhaps best known for her 1969 novel, The Left Hand of Darkness, set in a world of androgynous people who shift between male and female. Le Guin (originally Kroeber) was born [...]

Terry McMillan: Susan’s Almanac Project for October 18, 2019

By |2020-12-17T21:18:11+00:00October 18th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Terry McMillan (b. 1951), who is best known for her fantastically popular novels Waiting to Exhale (1992; film 1995) and How Stella Got Her Groove Back (1996; film 1998) and is credited with teaching the publishing world that there is a huge market of middle-class professional black female readers. McMillan was [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 16, 2019

By |2019-10-16T14:23:02+00:00October 16th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of Noah Webster (1758-1843), author of the first significant dictionary of American English and also a sort of honorary Founding Father who hung out with the likes of Alexander Hamilton and Benjamin Franklin and once, as an arrogant 26 year old, criticized George Washington at a dinner party hosted by same for [...]

Susan’s Almanac Project for October 15, 2019

By |2019-10-15T16:28:55+00:00October 15th, 2019|

It’s the birthday of poet and author Helen Hunt Jackson (1830-1885), best known for her novel Ramona (1884), a love story set in Old California that tells the tale of a half-Irish, half-Native American orphan girl and her lover, Alessandro, a full Native American, and the discrimination they endure. Jackson in fact was an early [...]

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