How about 3 favorites?
T. E. Lawrence
e.e. cummings
Sigfried Sassoon
How about 3 favorites?
T. E. Lawrence
e.e. cummings
Sigfried Sassoon
Splendid thread!
I think that authors, as a whole, live outside of the norm. To a certain extent, that is what makes their writing interesting to the rest of us.
Hunter S. Thompson led an interesting life, and nobody could call it normal. Also he kept just about everything that he ever wrote. The letters from his formative years are collected in a book entitled: “The Proud Highway.” I found it fascinating. I also had the uncomfortable sense that I was reading something I shouldn’t be reading. Something private. Something stumbled upon while staying at friend’s house. Something found, wrapped-up, and hidden in the back of the underwear drawer in the guest bedroom. Anyway, it’s a good read.
Wisconsin rocks! I was hatched at The Dane County Municipal Hospital. It was right around 9 months after some sweaty, anxious, dorm-room action on the UW campus – a few years ago.
Snobbery be damned; some great writing has come out of small towns.
Uhhhh...
Poe was a freak!! Byron was twisted (with regards to incest etc) and what's weird about his life is that he never really got shunned by society as you might expect.
James Tully wrote a book called "The Crimes of Charlotte Bronte", which basically claims that Charlotte was complicit in murdering her sisters, that Arthur Bell Nicholls 'helped' all three sisters write their novels, he got Emily pregnant, he also apparently killed Branwell, and finally to top it all off, he also had a running affair with Martha Brown the maid at Haworth and finally killed Charlotte.
Needless to say, there is very little substantiating evidence for his claims. Also, Tully tends to disregard the Brontes as being three women with perhaps not a lot of worldly experience, but a bit nonetheless, and certainly a background of reading and writing long before Nicholls came onto the scene. And it's badly written- possibly worse than Dan Brown (and you know how bad that is).
Well, back to the actual subject of the thread...I think there's quite a bit of speculation about Shakespeare (did he write the plays? What about the gap of a few years which we know nothing about? etc, etc). Mary Shelley had a pretty interesting life. So did George Eliot, especially with her conflict with her brother over the 'immorality' of her relationship with Lewes.
Graham Greene intrigues me, because he was so un-tortured as a writer. He'd methodically write 500 words a day (apparently literally: he'd stop in the middle of a sentence if that was word #500), often finishing by 9 in the morning. Then he'd have the rest of the day free to do whatever he wanted. And yet he was quite a prolific author who wrote to a pretty high standard.
Christopher Marlowe. He was radical in his thinking and wasn't afraid to show it in his writing. This is more than likely why he met an untimely death.
Kathrine Mansfield, er, before she got Syphilis, and TB, and god knows what else.
Jack Kerouac had an interesting life, to me, all his travels, quests for something quite mysterious, maybe himself or salvation, and his life as a bum, and his troubles with alcohol...
Emily Dickinson too, when she got secluded at some point of her life and I like the mystery of the Master Letters she wrote.
The Marquis de Sade had an eventful life. Now he was an interesting character. Far more interesting than the bulk of his work, actually.![]()
I find it interesting that Wallace Stevens life was so uninteresting. He went to law school and got a job at the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company…and that was pretty much it, except he wrote some beautiful poetry in his spare time.
Would have to be Dashiell Hammett as I am very fond of his Continental Op stories. Have often wondered what he would have written if writer's block and a disdain for the detective genre had not killed his career off circa 1935. Almost 30 years went by and he started a few things but never finished them. Helped Lillian Hellman with her plays but I was never a fan of her. To give her due credit she followed his wishes and allowed only certain stories/books to stay in print but since her death his othe rmaterial is seeing the light of day which has been a mixed blessing as I see some stories are best left in the dust bin. Sigh. But at least all the Op stories made it back.
Another very good book about Marlowe is The Reckoning by Charles Nicholl, about the strange circumstances of his death. He's one of the authors who intrigue me, along with the greatest writer of them all of course, Shakespeare. Other greats who I find fascinating are Zola, Orwell, Hardy, Dickens, Eliot, Trollope, Byron, Shelley, Keats, Coleridge and many more. I am usually interested in a person if I like their work.