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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 163 of 448
May 24

1945 Indicted for treason in 1943 for his support of Fascist Italy, Ezra Pound turned himself in to American authorities after the Italian surrender and on this day was driven to a makeshift prison camp in Pisa, where, for three weeks, he was held in an open cage of steel mesh before being moved to a nearby tent.
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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 162 of 448
May 23

1948 ...he tells the story of his arrival in Never Cry Wolf, one of two controversial books, along with People of the Deer, he wrote about his first time in the barrens. The books, fierce and funny, drew attention to the mistreatment of, respectively, wolves and the local Inuit, and drew plenty of fire to Mowat, especially from the government officials with whom he engaged in spirited combat in both tales.
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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 161 of 448
May 22

1942 When Naomi Nakane sits down in 1972 to read the unsent letters her aunt Emily wrote to Naomi's mother thirty years before, it's like finding her "childhood house filled with rooms and corners I've never seen." Written from Vancouver to Japan where Naomi's mother had returned to take care of their own mother before the attack on Pearl Harbor divided the countries by war, the letters began with Emily's ...
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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 160 of 448
May 21

1813 By the time Henri Beyle rejoined Napoleon's army at the Battle of Bautzen, the witty urban dandy was sick of war. He had survived the disastrous retreat from Russia the previous winter, and the prospect of observing more carnage, even from a comfortable distance, made him ill. "It's like a man who has drunk too much punch and has been forced to throw it up; he is disgusted with it for life."
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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 159 of 448
May 20

1845... her famously tyrannical father, violently skeptical of the prospect of marriage for his sickly daughter, as well as her own fear that she'd merely "make a company-show of an infirmity" for Browning and "hold a beggar's hat for sympathy." Meet they did, though, on this afternoon, the first of ninety visits—always with her father safely out of the house—before their elopement to Italy.
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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 158 of 448
May 19

1857 In a scene, recorded on this day in the Goncourt Journals, that encapsulates much of nineteenth-century French literary life, the poet Charles Baudelaire, "coming out of a tart's rooms," met the critic Charles-Augustin Sainte-Beauve. "Ah! I know where you're going!" said Baudelaire. "And I know where you've been," replied Sainte-Beauve. "But look," he added, "I'd rather go and have a chat with you."...
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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 157 of 448
1943 At the Lincoln University commencement ceremonies, Langston Hughes, on the stage to receive an honorary doctorate from his alma mater, "got both hungry and sleepy" as Carl Sandburg spoke on Abraham Lincoln for three and a half hours.
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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 156 of 448
May 17

1890 In the Aberdeen Saturday Pioneer, a short-lived newspaper in South Dakota he largely wrote himself (and the latest in a series of failed business ventures), L. Frank Baum on this day published "Beautiful Displays of Novelties which Rival in Attractiveness the Famed Museums of the World," an appreciation of a budding art form: the store display window. His interest in the subject didn't end there.
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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 155 of 448
1836 On the marriage bond for his wedding to his cousin Virginia Clemm, Edgar Allan Poe and his witness, Thomas W. Cleland, attested that the bride "is of the full age of twenty-one years." She had not yet turned fourteen.
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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 154 of 448
May 15

1939 ...to a twenty-minute nighttime trial in the private offices of Lavrenti Beria, the chief of Stalin's secret police. He was executed in the early hours of the following morning, though his family was not told of his death until fourteen years later. "I was not given time to finish," he was heard to say at his arrest, a plea he repeated to Beria when he made his final request, "Let me finish my work."
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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 153 of 448
May 14

1944 ..."My Dear Miss Rand: I've read every word of the Fountainhead. Your thesis is the great one," he wrote. "So I suppose you will be set up in the marketplace and burned as a witch. "Thank you," she replied on this day, but she wasn't worried: "I think I am made of asbestos." And then she came to the point: "Now, would you be willing to build a house for me?" (He designed one, but it was never built.)
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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 152 of 448
May 13

1871 "You will not understand at all," Arthur Rimbaud, age sixteen, wrote his teacher and mentor George Izambard, but for a poet "the idea is to reach the unknown by the derangement of all the senses."
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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 151 of 448
May 12

1904 Following disappointing sales for his previous two books, The House Behind the Cedars and The Marrow of Tradition, Houghton Mifflin turned down Charles W. Chestnutt's new novel, The Colonel's Dream, regretting that "the public has failed to respond adequately to your other admirable work in this line." Agreeing with Houghton that "the public does not care for books in which the principal characters...
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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 150 of 448
May 11

1924 Drawn to a new apartment in Brooklyn Heights by his first love, a Danish sailor who's father lived in the building, Hart Crane was also attracted by another local feature: the view of the Brooklyn Bridge, "the most superb piece of construction in the modern world," he wrote his mother on this day. "For the first time in many weeks I am beginning to further elaborate my plans for my Bridge poem."
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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 149 of 448
May 10

1907 Kenneth Grahame, banker and writer, had been telling bedtime stories about moles and water-rats to his difficult son, Alastair (known to all as "Mouse"), for a few years, but he first began to write then down in a birthday letter to Mouse, who had been dispatched with his governess on a separate holiday from his parents.
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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 148 of 448
May 9

1939 Christopher Isherwood make his first visit to Washington, D.C.: "There is something charming, and even touching, about this city. For the size of the country it represents, it is absurdly small. The capital of a nation of shrewd conservative farmers."
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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 147 of 448
May 8

1948 ...Henry Miller, and, most prominently, John Steinbeck, who collaborated with Ricketts on Sea of Cortez, a travelogue and research record of their expedition in the Gulf of California, and made him famous as the model for "Doc" in Cannery Row. "the greatest man in the world is dying," Steinbeck drunkenly told a friend in New York as he waited for a flight west, "and there is nothing I can do."
May 08, 2025 09:21AM 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 146 of 448
May 7

1932 At the height of his most prodigiously creative period, with The Sound and the Fury and As I Lay Dying recently published and Light in August on its way, William Faulkner reported for work as a screenwriter at the Culver City offices of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Bleeding from a small head wound—he said he had been struck by a cab—he announced: "I've got an idea for Mickey Mouse"...
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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 145 of 448
May 6

1871 When the great man arrived in the Yosemite Valley, the word went out: "Emerson is her!" John Muir joined the crowd around him but was too awed to approach. Later, though, he sent a note inviting Emerson to stay for "a month's worship" in the woods, and the next morning Emerson rode up to the hill to meet the young man.
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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 144 of 448
May 5

1857 At a dinner at Boston's Parker House, assembled by the publisher Moses Phillips, eight leading literary men, including Emerson, Longfellow, Lowell, and Oliver Wendell Holmes, met to found the Atlantic. "Imagine your uncle at the head of such guests," blushed Phillips to his niece two weeks later. "It was the proudest moment of my life."
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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 143 of 448
May 4

1896 Why did Edith Wharton and her husband purchase a brownstone in an unfashionable Upper East Side neighborhood? "On account of the bicycling," she explained.
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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 142 of 448
May 3

Driven back once by cold and current, they tried again a week later and made the four-mile crossing in a little more than an hour, an achievement he celebrated in a short poem and mentioned again nearly a decade later in Don Juan. The hazardous current, he wrote to one friend, made him "doubt whether Leander's conjugal powers must not have been exhausted in his passage to paradise."
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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 141 of 448
May 2

1981 Jim Williams did not deny that he shot Danny Hansford in the office of his carefully restored and furnished Savannah mansion shortly after midnight. He just said Danny shot first (and second and third). It wasn't this murder that drew John Berendt to Savannah to write Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil: he had already fallen for the city and its mix of gossipy gentility and down-market style, ...
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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 140 of 448
May 1

1908 ... Carl Sandburg confessed "A sort of revelry possesses me at times among these—to talk their slangiest slang, speak their homely, beautiful home-speech about all the common things—suddenly run a knife into their snobbery—then swing out int a crag-land of granite and azure where they can't follow but sit motionless following my flight with their eyes"
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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 134 of 448
April 30

1746 Samuel Johnson, until then a literary journeyman of moderate reputation, submitted to a group of booksellers "A Short Scheme for compiling a New Dictionary of the English Language," leading to a contract in June for the substantial sum of £1,575. "the great Labour is yet to come," he wrote, "the labour of interpreting these words and phrases, with brevity, fulness, and perspicuity," ...
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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 133 of 448
April 29

1939 In his mid-thirties, James Beard left Portland, Oregon, for New York City to make one last attempt at a theatre career. Like many actors, he found more work in catering, and he joined with his friends Bill and Irma Rhode to launch Hors d'Oeuvre, Inc., which on this day attracted the notice of the Herald Tribune's urbane columnist Lucius Beebe. Bill got the public credit from Beebe—
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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 133 of 448
April 28

1952 How do you make a spider beguiling? A pig, or a little girl: no problem. But Garth Williams's greatest challenge in illustrating E. B. White's Charlotte's Web was drawing Charlotte herself in a way that would be both natural and appealing. Williams sketched Charlotte with a variety of anthropomorphic eyes, eyebrows, and mouths—at one point going so far as to borrow the face of the Mona Lisa—
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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 132 of 448
1948 Gore Vidal reminded Christopher Isherwood, whom he had just met in Paris, "of a teddy bear, sometimes of a duck"; he also seemed "a pretty shrewd operator."
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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 131 of 448
April 26

1853 Reading Montaigne in bed, Flaubert wrote to Louise Colet: "I know of no more soothing book, none more conducive to peace of mind. It is so healthy, so down to earth!"
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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 130 of 448
April 25

1811 Jane Austen, asked by her sister about Sense and Sensibility, soon to be published, replied, "I am never too busy to think of S&S. I can no more forget it, than a mother can forget her sucking child."
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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