American writer and teacher (1903–1961)
William Troy (July 11, 1903 – May 26, 1961) was an American writer and teacher. He was married to poet and teacher Léonie Adams .
He won the U.S. National Book Award in Arts and Letters for his Selected Essays (1967).[ 1]
Life and career
Troy was born in Chicago and grew up in suburban Oak Park . He attended Loyola Academy (in Wilmette ) for high school. He sold his first review to a newspaper while still in high school. Later, he attended Yale University .
After graduating from Yale he taught for one year at the University of New Hampshire and then attended graduate school at Columbia University . He taught at several universities and colleges throughout his life, including New York University , Bennington College , and New School University . He was a popular teacher and lecturer on James Joyce and Shakespeare .
Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, Troy was a regular literary and film critic for The Nation , but he published essays, reviews, and poems in various journals.
Marriage
He married poet Léonie Adams in 1933.[citation needed ]
Death
Troy died of cancer of the larynx on May 26, 1961.[citation needed ]
Works
Selected Essays (1967).[ 1]
References
Sources
External links
International National Other