American novelist
Eleanor Clark (1913 – 1996) was an American writer and "master stylist," best known for her non-fiction accounts.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4]
Background
Eleanor Clark was born on July 6, 1913, in Los Angeles , California , but grew up in Roxbury, Connecticut .[ 1] [ 4] She attended Vassar College in the 1930s, where she met Mary McCarthy .[ 3] [ 4]
Career
Clark was involved with the literary magazine Con Spirito there, along with Elizabeth Bishop , Mary McCarthy , and her sister Eunice Clark. She also associated with Herbert Solow and helped translate documents for the 1937 "trial" of Leon Trotsky .[ 4]
During World War II, Clark worked in the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) in Washington, DC.[ 4]
Clark wrote reviews, essays, children's books, and novels.[ 1]
Personal life and death
In the late 1930s, Clark married Jan Frankel , a secretary of Trotsky; they divorced by the mid-1940s.[ 4] In 1952, Clark married Robert Penn Warren and lived in Fairfield, Connecticut , with him and their two children, Rosanna and Gabriel.[ 1]
On February 16, 1996, Clark died age 82 in Boston, Massachusetts .[ 1]
Awards
Works
For her book The Oysters of Locmariaquer (1964),[ 6] Clark received the U.S. National Book Award in the short-lived category Arts and Letters .[ 1] [ 5]
When Rome and the Villa was reissued, Anatole Broyard called it "perhaps the finest book ever to be written about a city."[ 1]
Clark wrote about her experiences with the CPUSA and Trotskyites in at least two fictionalized accounts, Bitter Box (1946) and Gloria Mundi (1979).[ 4]
Novels:
Bitter Box (1946)[ 7] [ 8]
Baldur's Gate (1970)[ 9]
Song of Roland (1960)[ 10]
Dr. Heart: A Novella and Other Stories (1974)[ 11]
Gloria Mundi: A Novel (1979)[ 12]
Nonfiction:
Rome and a Villa (1952)[ 13]
Oysters of Locmariaquer (1964)[ 14]
Eyes, Etc.: A Memoir (1977)[ 15]
Tamrart: 13 Days in the Sahara (1984)[ 16]
Camping Out (1986)[ 17]
Translations:
See also
References
^ a b c d e f g
Thomas, Robert McG. Jr. (February 19, 1996). "Eleanor Clark is Dead at 82 - A Ruminative Travel Essayist" . The New York Times . Retrieved May 30, 2010 .
^
Kunitz, Stanley (1955). Twentieth Century Authors: A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Literature. Supplement, Volume 1 . H. W. Wilson. p. 203. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^ a b c d
"Eleanor Clark" . National Book Foundation. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^ a b c d e f g
Wald, Alan M. (1987). The New York Intellectuals: The Rise and Decline of the Anti-Stalinist Left from the 1930s to the 1980s . UNC Press Books. pp. 246–248. ISBN 9780807841693 . Retrieved January 20, 2019 .
^ a b
"Oysters of Locmariaquer" . National Book Foundation. Retrieved March 10, 2012 .
^ Warren, Rosanna (August 2024). "My Mother's Oysters" . Harper's . Vol. 349, no. 2021.
^
Clark, Eleanor (1946). Bitter Box . Doubleday. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
"Bitter Box" . Kirkus . April 4, 1946. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
Clark, Eleanor (1970). Baldur's Gate . Pantheon. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
Clark, Eleanor (1960). Song of Roland . Random House. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
Clark, Eleanor (1974). Dr. Heart: A Novella and Other Stories . Pantheon. ISBN 9780394494111 . Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
Clark, Eleanor (1979). Gloria Mundi: A Novel . Pantheon. ISBN 9780394505367 . Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
Clark, Eleanor (1952). Rome and a Villa . Doubleday. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
Clark, Eleanor (1964). Oysters of Locmariaquer . Pantheon. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
Clark, Eleanor (1977). Eyes, Etc.: A Memoir . Pantheon. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
Clark, Eleanor (1984). Tamrart: 13 Days in the Sahara . S. Wright. ISBN 9780913773154 . Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
Clark, Eleanor (1986). Camping Out . Putnam. ISBN 9780399131226 . Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
^
Sender, Ramón José (1943). Dark Wedding . Translated by Eleanor Clark. Doubleday, Doran. Retrieved July 24, 2019 .
External links
Eleanor Clark Papers . Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
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