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We are assembled here this May evening of 2006 to celebrate our own Leading Lady of American Letters. The tall, slender author, her classic looks so reminiscent of ladies in an elegant Victorian era salon, reads one of her earlier short stories at the Free Library of Philadelphia. She speaks with such feeling and precision, we close our eyes and envision her youthful heroine's anxiety and naivete in that familiar setting of an upstate New York town. Later, in another room of the library, I will meet her too briefly at a book signing. She stands to greet me, smiling so pleasantly and asks, "What do you do?" in the friendliest way. I reply "I'm a proofreader," somewhat embarrassed at my flimsy Dickensian credential. This was my own personal brush with greatness and I find myself tongue-tied with hero worship. She is gracious and fragile, exquisitely feminine and warm and I would learn I was not the only groupie in the library throng that evening - a multitude of fans lined up to meet the literary icon. Joyce Carol Oates, as her critics rightly rhapsodize, is a force of nature, a uniquely powerful writer whose brilliance rests not just in the singularly American landscapes she paints, not just in the idiosyncratic characters who people her storytelling, but in the creation of rich personal moments of intimacy, of revelation and insight; she makes us witnesses, eavesdroppers, to her characters' deepest thoughts, longings, her voice reaches out to us from the pages, a voice as poignant as a mother's in the gloom of night, reading to her children just before prayers are murmured and sleep tiptoes in. The path of literary greatness leads us to her heroes... James Joyce, Emily Bronte, Thoreau, Faulkner, Flaubert, Hemingway; like each one of these celebrated wordsmiths, she is an iconoclast, an original... unique, incomparable, our own quintessential national treasure.
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Jul 29, 2015
Jul 29, 2015 at 4:59 PM UTC
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We are assembled here this May evening of 2006 to celebrate our own Leading Lady of American Letters. The tall, slender author, her classic looks so reminiscent of ladies in an elegant Victorian era salon, reads one of her earlier short stories at the Free Library of Philadelphia. She speaks with such feeling and precision, we close our eyes and envision her youthful heroine's anxiety and naivete in that familiar setting of an upstate New York town. Later, in another room of the library, I will meet her too briefly at a book signing. She stands to greet me, smiling so pleasantly and asks, "What do you do?" in the friendliest way. I reply "I'm a proofreader," somewhat embarrassed at my flimsy Dickensian credential. This was my own personal brush with greatness and I find myself tongue-tied with hero worship. She is gracious and fragile, exquisitely feminine and warm and I would learn I was not the only groupie in the library throng that evening - a multitude of fans lined up to meet the literary icon. Joyce Carol Oates, as her critics rightly rhapsodize, is a force of nature, a uniquely powerful writer whose brilliance rests not just in the singularly American landscapes she paints, not just in the idiosyncratic characters who people her storytelling, but in the creation of rich personal moments of intimacy, of revelation and insight; she makes us witnesses, eavesdroppers, to her characters' deepest thoughts, longings, her voice reaches out to us from the pages, a voice as poignant as a mother's in the gloom of night, reading to her children just before prayers are murmured and sleep tiptoes in. The path of literary greatness leads us to her heroes... James Joyce, Emily Bronte, Thoreau, Faulkner, Flaubert, Hemingway; like each one of these celebrated wordsmiths, she is an iconoclast, an original... unique, incomparable, our own quintessential national treasure.
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Jul 29, 2015
Jul 29, 2015 at 4:59 PM UTC
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