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Wilella Sibert Cather (December 7, 1873April 24, 1947) is among the most eminent American authors. She is known for her depictions of US life in novels like O Pioneers!, My Ántonia, and Death Comes for the Archbishop.

Early life


Cather was born in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley, but her family relocated to Nebraska in 1883 and she spent the rest of her childhood in Red Cloud, Nebraska. She insisted on attending college, so her family borrowed money so she could enroll at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. While there, she became a regular contributor to the Nebraska State Journal.

She then moved to Pittsburgh, where she taught high school and worked for Home Monthly and McClure's Magazine. The latter publication serialized her first novel, Alexander's Bridge, which was heavily influenced by Henry James.

Writing career


Cather moved to New York City in 1906 in order to join the editorial staff of McClure's and later became the managing editor (1908). As a muckraking journalist, she coauthored a powerful and highly critical biography of Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of Christian Science. It was serialized in McClure's in 1907-8 and published as a book the next year. Christian Scientists were outraged and tried to buy every copy; it was reprinted by the University of Nebraska Press in 1993.

She met author Sarah Orne Jewett, who advised Cather to rely less on the influence of James and more on her native Nebraska. For her novels she returned to the prairie for inspiration, and these works became popular and critical successes. She won the Pulitzer Prize in 1923 for One of Ours (1922).

She was celebrated by critics like H.L. Mencken for writing about ordinary people in plainspoken language. When he won the Nobel Prize in Literature, Sinclair Lewis said Cather should have won it instead. However, later critics tended to favor more experimental authors and attacked Cather, a political conservative, for ignoring the actual plight of ordinary people.

In 1973, Willa Cather was honored by the United States Postal Service with her image on a postage stamp. Cather is a member of the Nebraska Hall of Fame. In 1986, she was inducted into the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame. She was a close companion to opera singer Olive Fremstad.

Personal life


Cather taught English in a Pittsburgh high school from 1901 to 1906. This coincided, in part, with what some claim to be her 12-year lesbian relationship with Isabelle McClung. The claim postulates that by concealing her relationships with the women she allegedly loved (including Louise Pound, Isabella McClung, and Edith Lewis, the latter of whom was in a domestic partnership with her that lasted 40 years), Cather also concealed the ways in which these women possibly contributed to and nourished her creative writing abilities. *

Cather died in 1947 in New York, in the apartment she shared with Edith Lewis, and is buried in Jaffrey, New Hampshire. At the time of her death, she ordered her personal letters burned.

Trivia


  • She wrote her first novel at age 38.

  • After reading her cousin G.P. Cather's wartime letters home to his mother, wrote the Pulitzer Prize-winning "One of Ours". He was Nebraska's first casualty in WW I.

  • Considered her novels to be "High Art" and refused to change her style or themes to make her work commercially appealing, and did nothing to keep up with the current trends in fiction.

Personal quote


  • "Youth is the source of power and creativity."

Nonfiction


  • Willa Cather and Georgine Milmine The Life of Mary Baker G. Eddy and the History of Christian Science (1909) (reprinted U of Nebraska Press, 1993)

Novels


External links


1873 births | 1947 deaths | American novelists | People from Virginia | University of Nebraska-Lincoln alumni | People from Nebraska | Nebraska writers | People from Pittsburgh | People from West Virginia | Pulitzer Prize winners | Women writers

Willa Cather | Willa Cather | Willa Cather | วิลลา เคเธอร์

 

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