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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year
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Judi
Judi is on page 316 of 448
October 5

1927 ... only with a change from one sex to another." She quickly gave herself up "to the pure delight of this farce," and then asked her subject's permission to write about "the lusts of your flea; and the lure of your mind." vita ws equally delighted: "What fun for you; what fun for m," she replied. "Yes, go ahead, toss up your pancake, brown it nicely on both sides, put Brandy over it, and serve hot."
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 315 of 448
October 4

1866 ... contracted novel until this day, less than a month before his deadline, when he finally engaged a young stenographer, Anna Grigorievna, to help him. He dictated the story of The Gambler to her every afternoon, turned in the manuscript two hours before the deadline, and then, when they net a week later to resume his work on Crime and Punishment, asked for Anna's hand in marriage, which she granted.
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 314 of 448
October 3

1918 It wasn't until he was thirty-seven, with four novels published and one, Maurice, written but kept secret because of the gay relationship at its heart, that E. M. Forster first had sex. Stationed in Egypt with the Red Cross during the war, he confessed in coded language to a friend, "Yesterday, for the first time in my life I parted with respectability. I have felt the step would be taken for many...
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Mark
Mark is on page 342 of 448
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 313 of 448
October 2

1830

... "Everything I see in him corresponds to his pamphlet on Biblical Cosmology." And when Mr. Casaubon, on making his goodbyes on this brisk day, alludes drily to his need for young companionship, Dorothea, glowing with the prospect of matrimony, prepares for an ill-fated decision that George Eliot is too good a novelist, and Middlemarch too great a move., to make the end of her story.
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 312 of 448
October 1

1888 L. Frank Baum opened Baum's Bazaar on Main Street in Aberdeen, South Dakota, offering housewares, toys, and the "latest novelties in Japanese Goods, Plush, Oxidized Brass and Leather Novelties." It failed a year later.
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 307 of 448
September 30

1934 In the apparently exhaustive list of the works of Pierre Menard enumerated by the narrator of Jorge Luis Borges's tale "Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote" there is at least one document missing: the letter that Menard wrote the narrator on this day explaining his masterpiece, his unfinished attempt to write Cervantes's Don Quixote—not merely to copy it but to write it himself word for word...
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 306 of 448
September 29

1929 Percy Hutchinson, in the New York Times, on Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms: "Mr. Hemingway's manner does not seem to be quite an enduring thing, any more than was Victoria heaviness enduring. But ... seldom has a literary style so precisely jumped with the time.'
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 305 of 448
September 28

1909 ...Curtiss the American, with his massive biplane, is here. And in the crowd, celebrities: D'Annunzio, Puccini, and, according to Guy Davenport's retelling of the same episode, Wittgenstein. Kafka's report in Bohemia on this day, "The Aeroplanes at Brescia," one of. his first published pieces, made him a pioneer of sorts too: the first in German literature to write about airplanes,
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 304 of 448
September 27

1960 Out of the invitation of the Soviet newspaper Izvestia to describe a single day in her life Christa Wolf made a life's obsession, returning every September 27 to record her day and thereby creating One Day a Year, a memoir accumulated from everyday moments lived amid the upheavals of history and the self-conscious drama of a life dedicated to writing. And what upheavals: from this day in 1960,...
Oct 08, 2025 08:55PM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Mark
Mark is on page 299 of 448
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 303 of 448
September 26

1950 Raymond Chandler accepted Strangers on a Train, his last job as a Hollywood screenwriter, out of curiosity: he wanted to work with Alfred Hitchcock, and Hitchcock wanted to work with him, even if it meant driving a hundred miles to Chandlers's home in La Jolla for story meetings But it didn't go well. On this day, after eight weeks and $40,000 (which nearly equaled the writer's lifetime book ...
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 302 of 448
September 25
1930... and many other readers did too. Maugham, of course, demurred, telling Walpole that "nothing had been further from my thoughts than to describe you," but after Walpole's death he freely confessed to friends and in the introduction to a reissue of the book that he indeed had Walpole, that "ridiculous creature," in mind when he wrote what he would later say was his favorite of his own books.
Oct 05, 2025 05:42AM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 301 of 448
September 24

1920 J. M. Murry, in the Athenaeum, on Frank Harris's Oscar Wilde; His Life and Confessions: "The personal magnetism of a man dies with him; his soldi achievement as an artist alone has substance in the eyes of posterity; and we, who are posterity for Wilde, must confess that he is rather a pale ghost as an artist."
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 300 of 448
September 23

1930 ... later would be recognized as the great Portuguese writer of his time), he composed a cryptic and woeful suicide note, laid it by a seaside chasm known as the Mouth of Hell at the moment of the autumnal equinox, and while Pessoa reported to the press that his friend had disappeared, he followed his girlfriend to Germany and watched with pleasure as the newspapers of Europe reported his death.
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 299 of 448
September 22

1598 Two days after his comedy Every Man in His Humour was first performed (with William Shakespeare in the cast), Ben Jonson set out with a fellow actor, Gabriel Spencer, to settle a quarrel with swords in Hoxton Fields. The two had been imprisoned together for their parts in a. a "lewd" and "seditious" production the year before, but now Jonson, after taking a cut on the arm, klled Spencer...
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 298 of 448
1891 For decades, biographies of Stephen Crane included. poignant romantic episode from his youth when, for a few intense weeks, he courted a "tall darkly pretty girl named Helen Trent." In conversation and letters he asked if she liked flowers and dogs, praised the virtues of naked ocean swimming, and told her, "You have the most beautiful arms I ever saw." She questions his interest I the "vile: slums of the ...
Sep 30, 2025 06:14AM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 297 of 448
September 20

1929 "Hell, in case you're interested," Jim Thompson once wrote, "is actually the College of Agriculture of the University of Nebraska," the institution in which Thompson matriculated on this day, just a month before the stock market crash brought the start of even harder times to the Great Plains. A twenty-two-year-old high school dropout and the family breadwinner as a hotel bellboy and oil-field ...
Sep 28, 2025 05:38AM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 297 of 448
September 18

1759 French forces at Quebec surrender to the British.
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 296 of 448
September 19

1995 Fiction may not get any. harder-boiled than Horace McCoy's They Shoot Horses, Don't They? Its a crime novel as suicide note, and it's no spoiler to reveal that the title of the book is its last line too, spoken by the narrator, Robert Syverten, as he's arrested for murder. Throughout the book as Robert And Gloria Beatty has partner in dancing and death, shuffle toward their fate through a brutal...
Sep 27, 2025 06:11AM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 295 of 448
September 18

1840 ...and included in his collection Pulphead.. Constantine Rafiinesque, whose peers considered him ill-mannered and grotesquely corpulent, was, by his own measure, "Botanist, Naturalist, Geologist, Geographer, Historian, Poet, Philosopher, Philologist, Economist, Philanthropist," By Sullivan's measure he was a man both ahead of and behind his time, a polymath in the style of the previous century ...
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 294 of 448
September 17

1963 ...what he'd do: he just wants to get away from town, from his past, or maybe he wants the excitement of doing a job with Guitar. Everything carries weight in Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon, symbolic and otherwise, but this sack, once they get it, turns out to be lighter than expected, filled with rocks and old bones rather than gold, thereby saving the thieves from seeing their desires fulfilled.
Sep 26, 2025 10:00AM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 293 of 448
September 16

1896 Three years after writing Maggie, a Girl of the Streets, Stephen Crane found himself—whether by chance or design is still debated—taking the side of an alleged woman of the streets. In this day's early hours, Crane, a star reporter for the Ne York Journal, saw a woman Dora Clark falsely arrested for soliciting and, despite the advice of the sergeant on duty that "if you monkey with this case,...
Sep 26, 2025 06:34AM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 292 of 448
September 15

1883 Seventy-two years before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on an Alabama bus, Ida B. Wells refused the demand of a conductor on the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway to leave the first-class ladies carriage for the crowded colored car, and indeed scratched and bit the conductor as he was pulled forcibly out of her seat, Wells won a $500 court judgement against the railway—later overturned—but the...
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 291 of 448
September 14

1968 For Nick Hornby, as for much of the rest of the world, 1968 was a year of upheaval, although the tremors in Hornby's life weren't assassinations, protests, and war, but divorce, a new home, and a new school. Al of which left him vulnerable at age eleven, when his father took him to his first professional soccer game, to the strange mass lure of unrelenting sporting mediocrity—in other words, ...
Sep 25, 2025 10:16AM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 290 of 448
September 13

1939 His stove had reverted to an old gas-burner model that smells like burned grease. His refrigerator has become an obsolete, belt-driven monster. His TV set is now an AM radio in a wood cabinet, and his polyphonic audio set a Victrola, playing a 78 of Ray Noble's "Turkish Delight," And his homeopape machine? That's just gone. Ubik, Philip K. dick's realty-bending masterpiece, i...
Sep 25, 2025 07:52AM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 289 of 448
September 12

1867 The charges for the inquest into the death of eighteen-year-old Malcolm Melville, son of Herman, whose death by pistol was ruled a suicide "while labouring under temporary insanity of mind," totaled $11.31 1/4
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A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 288 of 448
1979 At the centre of Janet Malcolm's The Journalist and the Murderer is a note of seduction so brazen it was nearly its author's doing: a letter from reporter Joe McGinness to Jeffrey MacDonald, who hd just been convicted of the murder of his family, assuring him that "total strangers can recognize writing five minutes that you did not received a fair trial...It's a hell of a thing—spend the summer making a new ...
Sep 24, 2025 06:00AM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

Judi
Judi is on page 287 of 448
September 10

1967 Djuna Barnes, author of the avant-garde landmarks Nightwood and Ryder, spent the last forty-two years of her life as "the most famous unknown in the world!" as she wrote to a friend on this day. From her tiny apartment in Greenwich Village, she guarded her legacy and her privacy with a ferocity that led one acquaintance to refer to her as "Madame Vitriol," refusing visits from some admirers,...
Sep 23, 2025 10:15AM Add a comment
A Reader's Book of Days: True Tales from the Lives and Works of Writers for Every Day of the Year

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