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Staff

31 May (1930): Dawn Powell to Coburn Gilman

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

Do you want me to bring you an octopus, darling? There are several on hand.

30 May (1947): Truman Capote to Robert Linscott

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

…today I wrote two pages and oh Bob I do want it to be a beautiful book because it seems important to me that people try to write beautifully, now more than ever because the world is so crazy and only art is sane…

29 May (1957): Sylvia Plath to Aurelia Plath

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

I took “Stylization,” and, I think, wrote a very clever essay ostensibly in praise of style in all its forms as a religious devotee of style…

28 May (1940): Albert Camus to Jean Grenier

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

Albert Camus and Jean Grenier met in 1930; Camus was a student at the University of Algiers, Grenier his philosophy professor. Their student-mentor relationship lasted until 1960 and Camus’ death. Camus describes his current work to Grenier as three pieces … Continued

23 May (1914): Ezra Pound To Harriet Monroe

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

Are the only American poets to be those who are too lazy to study or travel, or too cowardly to learn what perfection means?

22 May (1951): Carl Sandburg to Thomas Hornsby Ferril

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

…lo and behold it turned out to be Goethe who wrote a book about how foolish it was to be born and scores of German youths committed suicide after reading it and when I tried to read it to see whether I would feel like committing suicide…

21 May (1959): John Steinbeck to Eugène Vinaver

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

Morgan [le Fay] learned necromancy in a nunnery. What better school for witches—lone, unfulfilled women living together.

20 May (1906): James Joyce to Grant Richards

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

Almost eight years before the publication of Dubliners, James Joyce was involved in a tense correspondence with Grant Richards, the man who originally agreed to publish the manuscript. The printer originally hired to set the book had objected to its … Continued

Staff Picks: Clara Schumann, The Death Notebooks

By Staff × In Conversation

Many artists exaggerate the need for self-absorption without understanding what is here expressed: that the silence and meditation of artistic “self-absorption” require an unsexy innocence…

17 May (1948): Tennessee Williams to James Laughlin

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

Always fond of travel and changes of locale, Tennessee Williams writes to James Laughlin from Rome, about his admiration for Van Gogh and his inability to write anywhere near Broadway, where so many of his plays were performed.  45 Via … Continued

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