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2010
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Thirty
Years of Literary Insights
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above,
left to right:
Deborah Weisgall,
Alan Brinkley,
Peter Canellos
chats with audience
regular Sandy
Cunningham, and
Robert Goolrick.
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The
authors on Stage program,
one of greater Boston’s
most anticipated literary
happenings each spring
and fall, is celebrating
its 30th year of showcasing
noteworthy writers.
Sponsored by the Wellesley
College Alumnae of
Boston for booklovers
of every definition,
the library benefit
attracts bibliophiles
eager for literary
discussion or those
simply curious to
hear about newly published
works. Flocking two
hundred strong to
the Wellesley College
Club, attendees enjoy
a lively morning of
talks, autographing,
and author-audience
chat.
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Co-chairs
Carole Ely
of Dover and
Jean Canellos
of Weston
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Each
program features three
current writers selected
by a winning formula
devised decades ago
by the Authors on
Stage founder, Janice
Hunt of Needham: “one
author you do know,
one author you should
know, and one author
you will know.”
“The
subject matter and
authors are carefully
thought out, so there
is rarely a sense
of repetition,” says
Lia Hunt Zylstra,
Vice President of
London’s
Folio Society and
the event’s
moderator. “The
authors speak with
a combination of intellect,
passion, and humor
that inspires us to
listen and learn.” As
a result, National
Book Award winners
such as Julia Glass
and Tracy Kidder have
taken the stage beside
celebrity authors
such as Stephen King
and Dennis Lehane,
with every variation
in between.
“At
Authors on Stage,
you may discover a
famous museum director
like [the late] Thomas
Hoving unveiling a
dramatic quest for
antiquities from shady
characters in mysterious
parts of the globe,” observes
the program’s
co-chair, Jean Canellos
of Weston. “Or
you may find a gentler
voice like that of
Reeve Lindbergh drawing
you into a quieter
world where the pleasures
of nature nurture
the soul and guide
the mind.”
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Moderator
Lia Hunt Zylstra
in the green
room with
author Sue
Miller
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Whether
you are partial to
novels, biographies,
how-tos, memoirs,
short stories, poetry,
cookbooks, or mysteries – all
have characterized
the Authors on Stage
run.
Inspiration
and Motivation
A
distinguishing feature
of the program is
that the presenters
are discouraged from
reading book excerpts,
but invited, instead,
to address the myriad
factors entering into
the genesis of their
work. Co-chair Carole
Ely of Dover particularly
enjoys this “behind-the-book” aspect
of the event. “I
am enthralled to listen
as the authors share
their writing journeys
and personal stories,” she
says. “The
weaving of life and
writing – how
the muse flows or
not – is
fascinating.”
Indeed,
many authors focus
their comments on
this question of inspiration
and motivation. Matthew
Pearl, whose book
The
Dante Club brings
together 1400s and
1800s history in a
literary whodunit,
found his by a move
to Boston. “I
grew up in Florida,” he
said, “so
I was in shock at
Boston’s
rich history. It was
my source of motivation
for writing the novel.” Memoirist
Da Chen, on the other
hand, credited filial
duty with inspiring
his charming Sounds
of the River, a story
of leaving a tiny
province for Beijing
in post-Cultural Revolution
China. “I
wrote in order to
be a good son,” he
told the audience. “My
parents gave me love,
and I, by writing
about them, gave them
immortality.”
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Adam
Haslett
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Novelist
Gregory Maguire’s
driving motivation
for his trilogy Wicked,
Son of a Witch, and
A
Lion Among Men – stories
which expand upon
L. Frank Baum’s
iconic characters – grew
from a childhood constraint. “I
had a strict upbringing,” he
said. “I
was allowed to go
to the library, but
could only watch TV
a half hour per week – and
the annual telecast
of The
Wizard of Oz!” The
anticipation of this
rare treat kindled
in him a fascination
for Oz that burns
bright in his adult
fantasy novels.
For
John Mitchell, growing
up in a region with
a strong sense of
place inspired his “setting-centric” writing. “Where
you come from influences
who you are,” he
explained. “My
parents and their
friends would sit
on our porch on Maryland’s
Eastern Shore and
tell stories to the
slow pace of their
rocking chairs.” Such
evocations now infuse
his work. The
Paradise of All These
Parts, the natural history
of Boston that he
showcased at Authors
on Stage, defines
the city through the
stones, trees, and
rivers that lace through
it.
Other
authors offer up quirky
details of their lives. “There
is Mystic
River author
Dennis Lehane, revealing
that he used his downtime
from writing to moonlight
as a valet at the
Ritz,” Zylstra
recalls, smiling.
Or James Fixx, explaining
how his father – convinced
that a name should
properly be a noun,
not a verb – added
an extra “x” to
their surname. And
what audience regular
could forget Yale’s
writer-in-residence,
Anne Fadiman, confessing
that she used a bacon
strip for a bookmark?
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Katherine
Hall Page
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Selecting
a Genre
The
majority of writers,
though, choose to
enlighten listeners
on the craft behind
working in particular
genres. Pulitzer Prize
finalist and Wellesley
native Adam Haslett,
for example, explained
his preference for
the short-story form
in introducing his
collection, You
Are Not a Stranger
Here: “You
can have an entire
experience of a life
captured in a single
reading; you can raise
the stakes quickly
and put in great emotional
force which would
not come out in a
novel until the end.”
Sue
Miller, in describing
the building blocks
of fiction, told the
largely female audience, “A
novel is essentially
about trouble. You
always need a dragon
for the character
to get past.” Agatha
Award winner Katherine
Hall Page noted that
while adhering to
such fiction-writing
conventions, a successful
mystery writer must
simultaneously offer
readers an engaging
puzzle.
“In
The
Body in the Sleigh [a brainteaser set
at Yuletide in coastal
Maine], I want you
to pit your wits against
me,” she
said. “In
addition to writing
a believable story,
I have to play fair
with you. At the end
you should be able
to say, ‘All
the clues were there.’”
Memoirist
Alix Kates Shulman,
who chronicled her
altered life after
her husband sustained
a traumatic brain
injury in To
Love What Is: A Marriage
Transformed, explored
the art of memoir
writing vis à vis
novel writing. “In
a memoir, the writer
has a pact with the
reader not to make
anything up,” she
explained. “Otherwise
the technique is the
same as in fiction-writing.
I [choose to] write
a memoir rather than
a novel if I think
readers will benefit
from knowing it’s
a true story. ‘If
I survived this experience,’ a
memoir suggests, ‘so
can you.’”
The
Singular Art of Biography
The
many biographers who
take the stage offer
insight into their
intricate art of writing
about others. To begin,
most have grappled
with deciphering and
distilling thousands
of pages of primary
source material. New
York Times science
writer Dennis Overbye,
for example, in crafting
Einstein
in Love – an
examination of a young
Albert Einstein and
the degree to which
his first wife might
have contributed to
his theories – sorted
through 45,000 of
the physicist’s
unpublished letters
locked up for decades
in Princeton; Diane
Middlebrook, in writing
Her
Husband, a biography
of poet Sylvia Plath’s
abusive spouse, Ted
Hughes, tackled 180,000
archival items made
available following
Hughes’ death
in 1998 (another carton
is sealed until 2023,
per Hughes); and Boston
Globe Editorial Page
Editor Peter Canellos,
the editor (and a
writer) of Last
Lion: The Fall and
Rise of Ted Kennedy, analyzed
50 years of the Globe’s coverage of the late
senator to craft his
biography as both “a
political story and
a personal tale of
redemption.”
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A
selection of first
edition volumes
featured at Authors
on Stage programs.
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As
for the skill-set
behind the genre,
Valerie Martin addressed
the biographer’s
need to magnify the
subject’s
inner life for the
reader, so that the
work transcends the
strictly historical
into the personal.
To achieve this “close-up” view
in her own rare work
of non-fiction, Salvation:
Scenes from the Life
of St. Francis, Martin
fractured the timeline.
She depicted St.
Francis in a series
of 31 vignettes,
beginning at his
death and continuing
chronologically
backwards to his
youth at his moment
of conversion – as
she put it, “going
from the darkness
to the light.”
And
Newtonian Megan Marshall,
whose 2005 triple
biography, The
Peabody Sisters:
Three Women Who
Ignited
American
Romanticism, was
20 years in the
making, similarly
spoke of the biographer’s
responsibility
to subjugate her
voice to that of
her subject. Marshall,
herself, had the
formidable task
of interweaving
the voices of three
distinctive subjects:
Mary, a diligent
reformer and wife
of the great educator
Horace Mann; Sophia,
a fragile painter
married to celebrated
novelist Nathaniel
Hawthorne; and Elizabeth,
a brilliant thinker
instrumental in
both the Transcendental
and kindergarten
movements in America. “It
is the sisters’ actual
words that make
the story come
alive,” Marshall
said of the Salem-raised
siblings. “It
is important
that the biographer’s
voice be strong
enough to carry
the story, but
not so strong
that it overwhelms
the subject.
It’s
part of the biographer’s
trick of going
from the record
of a life to
the story of
a life.”
Marshall
ended her talk with
a clue to 19th century
frugality, uncovered
as she read through
thousands of the Peabody
sisters’ letters
and journals archived
in California, New
York, and Boston.
Authors
on Stage Works
Soar to Prominence
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“Many
of the letters were
cross-written – apparently
to save on postage,” she
disclosed. “The
sisters filled up
an entire sheet with
writing, then turned
it 90 degrees and
wrote back across
their own handwriting!”
It
is just the sort of
literary tidbit that
has kept Authors on
Stage audiences packing
the house for three
decades.
Diane
Speare Triant, a writer
in Wellesley Hills,
is a founding member
of the Authors on
Stage committee.
Other
local committee members:
Kathie Clay, Jackie
Livingston, Gina Wickwire,
Jenny Zannetos, all
of Wellesley; Co-chair
Jean Canellos, Anandi
Ebsworth, Alison Randall,
Dorothy Robbins, all
of Weston.
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