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Malcolm Cowley

Malcolm Cowley (August 24, 1898 – March 27, 1989) was an American writer, editor, historian, poet, and literary critic. His best known works include his first book of poetry, Blue Juniata (1929), and his memoir, Exile's Return (1934; rev. 1951), written as a chronicler and fellow traveller of the Lost Generation and an influential editor and talent scout at Viking Press.

Malcolm Cowley
Cowley, photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1963
Born(1898-08-24)August 24, 1898[1]
Belsano, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedMarch 27, 1989(1989-03-27) (aged 90)
New Milford, Connecticut, U.S.
OccupationWriter
Alma materHarvard University

 Literature portal

Early life edit

Cowley was born August 24, 1898, in Belsano, Cambria County, Pennsylvania, to William Cowley and Josephine Hutmacher.[2] He grew up in the East Liberty neighborhood of Pittsburgh, where his father, William, was a homeopathic doctor. Cowley attended Shakespeare Street elementary school and in 1915 graduated from Peabody High School, where his boyhood friend Kenneth Burke was also a student. Cowley's first published writing appeared in his high school newspaper.[2]

He attended Harvard University, but his studies were interrupted when he joined the American Field Service during World War I to drive ambulances and munitions trucks for the French army. He returned to Harvard in 1919 and became editor of The Harvard Advocate. He graduated with a B.A. in 1920.[2]

Life in Paris edit

Cowley was one of the many literary and artistic figures who migrated to Paris in the 1920s. He became one of the best-known chroniclers of the American expatriates in Europe, as he frequently spent time with writers like Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Dos Passos, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, E. E. Cummings, Edmund Wilson, Erskine Caldwell, and others associated with American literary modernism. In Blue Juniata, Cowley described these Americans who travelled abroad during the postwar period as a "wandering, landless, uprooted generation";[3] similarly Hemingway, claiming to have taken the phrase from Gertrude Stein, called them the "lost generation".[4] This sense of uprootedness deeply affected Cowley's appreciation for the necessities of artistic freedom. It moreover informed his ideal of cosmopolitanism in contrast to the fervent nationalism(s) that had led to World War I.[5] Cowley recounted his experiences in Exile's Return, writing, "our whole training was involuntarily directed toward destroying whatever roots we had in the soil, toward eradicating our local and regional peculiarities, toward making us homeless citizens of the world".[6]

While Cowley associated with many American writers in Europe, the sense of admiration was not always mutual. Hemingway removed direct reference to Cowley in a later version of The Snows of Kilimanjaro, replacing his name with the description, "that American poet with a pile of saucers in front of him and a stupid look on his potato face talking about the Dada movement".[7] John Dos Passos's private correspondence revealed the contempt he held for Cowley, but also the care writers took to hide their personal feelings in order to protect their careers once Cowley had become an editor of The New Republic.[7] Regardless, Exile's Return was one of the first autobiographical texts to foreground the American expatriate experience. Despite not selling well during its first publication, it established Cowley as one of the most trenchant emissaries of the Lost Generation. Literary historian Van Wyck Brooks described Exile's Return as "an irreplaceable literary record of the most dramatic period in American literary history."[citation needed]

Early career and involvement in politics edit

While in Paris, Cowley found himself drawn to the avant-garde sensibilities of Dada, and also, like many other intellectuals of the period, to Marxism and its attempts to demystify the socioeconomic and political conditions that had plunged Europe into a devastating war.[2] He travelled frequently between Paris and Greenwich Village in New York, and through these intersecting social circles came into close proximity, though he never officially joined, with the U.S. Communist Party. In 1929, Cowley became an associate editor of the left-leaning magazine The New Republic, which he steered in "a resolutely communist direction"[8] The same year, he translated and wrote a foreword to the 1913 French novel 'La Colline Inspirée', by Maurice Barrès.[9] By the early 1930s, Cowley became increasingly involved in radical politics. In 1932, he joined Edmund Wilson, Mary Heaton Vorse, and Waldo Frank as union-sponsored observers of the miners' strikes in Kentucky. Their lives were threatened by the mines' owners, and Frank was badly beaten.[10] When Exile's Return was first published in 1934, it put forth a distinctly Marxist interpretation of history and social struggle.

In 1935, Cowley helped to establish a leftist collective, The League of American Writers. Other notable members included Archibald MacLeish, Upton Sinclair, Clifford Odets, Langston Hughes, Carl Sandburg, Carl Van Doren, Waldo Frank, David Ogden Stewart, John Dos Passos, Lillian Hellman, and Dashiell Hammett. Cowley was appointed Vice President, and over the next few years became involved in numerous campaigns, including attempts to persuade the United States government to support the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War. He resigned in 1940, owing to concerns that the organization was too heavily influenced by the Communist Party.

In 1941, near the outset of the United States' involvement in World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Cowley's associate, poet and "popular front" interventionist Archibald MacLeish, as head of the War Department's Office of Facts and Figures (precursor to the Office of War Information). MacLeish recruited Cowley as an analyst. This decision resulted in anti-communist journalists such as Whittaker Chambers and Westbrook Pegler publicly exposing Cowley's left-wing sympathies. Cowley soon found himself in the crosshairs of congressman Martin Dies (D-Tex.) and the House Un-American Activities Committee. Dies accused Cowley of belonging to seventy-two communist or communist-front organizations.[11] This number was certainly an exaggeration, but Cowley had no recourse to deny it. MacLeish soon came under pressure from J. Edgar Hoover and the Federal Bureau of Investigation to dismiss Cowley. In January 1942, MacLeish sent his reply that the FBI needed a course of instruction in history. "Don't you think it would be a good thing if all investigators could be made to understand that Liberalism is not only not a crime but actually the attitude of the President of the United States and the greater part of his Administration?", he said.[citation needed] Nevertheless, Cowley resigned two months later, vowing to never write about politics again.

Editorial career and academia edit

In 1944, having been more or less silenced politically, Cowley began a career as a literary advisor, editor, and talent scout at Viking Press. He was hired to work on the Portable Library series, which had started in 1943 with As You Were: A Portable Library of American Prose and Poetry Assembled for Members of the Armed Forces and Merchant Marine. In its inception, the Portable Library was an anthology of paperback reprints that could be mass-produced cheaply and marketed to military personnel. It also emphasized an American literary tradition that could be construed as patriotic during wartime. Yet Cowley was able to steer the series toward what were, in his esteem, underappreciated writers.

He first set out to edit The Portable Hemingway (1944). At the time, Hemingway was largely considered to be a sparse and simplistic writer. Cowley departed from this perception in his introductory essay, claiming instead that Hemingway could be read as tortured and submerged. This revaluation remains the dominant critical opinion today. Literary critic Mark McGurl argues that Hemingway's tip-of-the-iceberg style has become one of the most emulated in twentieth-century American prose, his name all but synonymous with the "pathos of understatement" and "the value of craft as represented by the practice of multiple revision".[12]

The Portable Hemingway sold so well that Cowley was able to convince Viking to publish a Portable Faulkner in 1946. William Faulkner was, at the time, slipping into literary obscurity. By the 1930s, he was working as a Hollywood screenwriter and in danger of seeing his works go out of print. Cowley again argued for a dramatic revaluation of Faulkner's position in American letters, enlisting him as an honorary member of the Lost Generation. Robert Penn Warren called The Portable Faulkner the "great watershed" moment for Faulkner's reputation, and many scholars view Cowley's essay as having resuscitated Faulkner's career.[13] Faulkner won a Nobel Prize in 1949. He later said, "I owe Malcolm Cowley the kind of debt no man could ever repay".[2]

Cowley then published a revised edition of Exile's Return in 1951. The revisions downplayed some of the more overtly Marxist tenets, and more obviously emphasized the return of the exile as a necessary step toward reestablishing a nation's solidarity: "the old pattern of alienation and reintegration, or departure and return, that is repeated in scores of European myths and continually re-embodied in life", Cowley wrote.[14] This time the book sold much better. Cowley also published a Portable Hawthorne (1948), The Literary Tradition (1954), and edited a new edition of Leaves of Grass (1959), by Walt Whitman. These were followed by Black Cargoes, A History of the Atlantic Slave Trade (1962), Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age (1966), Think Back on Us (1967), Collected Poems (1968), Lesson of the Masters (1971) and A Second Flowering (1973).

Cowley taught creative writing at the college-level beginning in the 1950s. Among his students were Larry McMurtry, Peter S. Beagle, Wendell Berry, as well as Ken Kesey, whose One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1962) Cowley helped publish at Viking. Writing workshops were a recent development at the time (the Iowa Writers' Workshop was founded in 1936), yet by midcentury their proliferation was of note for both writers and publishers. Cowley taught also at Yale, Michigan, Minnesota, Washington, California at Irvine and Berkeley, and even the prestigious Stegner Fellowship at Stanford, among other places, but he seldom maintained a full-time teaching appointment. Literary and cultural critic Benjamin Kirbach argues that this flitting back-and-forth between universities and the publishing industry allowed Cowley to reconcile his cosmopolitan ideal within the constraints of the academy. Kirbach writes: "Cowley's itinerancy—his seemingly effortless movement between universities and the publishing industry, between writers individual and collective—played a crucial role in institutionalizing [literary] modernism" in the twentieth century.[15]

As an editorial consultant to Viking Press, he pushed for the publication of Jack Kerouac's On the Road. Cowley's work anthologizing 28 Fitzgerald short stories and editing a reissue of Tender Is the Night, restructured based on Fitzgerald's notes, both in 1951, were key to reviving Fitzgerald's reputation as well, and his introduction to Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg, Ohio, written in the early 1960s, is said to have had a similar effect on Anderson's reputation. Other works of literary and critical importance include Eight More Harvard Poets (1923), A Second Flowering: Works & Days of the Lost Generation (1973), And I Worked at the Writer's Trade (1978), and The Dream of the Golden Mountains: Remembering the 1930s (1980).[citation needed]And I Worked won a 1980 U.S. National Book Award in the one-year category Autobiography.[16][a]

When The Portable Malcolm Cowley (Donald Faulkner, editor) was published in 1990, the year after Cowley's death, Michael Rogers wrote in Library Journal: "Though a respected name in hardcore literary circles, in general the late Cowley is one of the unsung heroes of 20th-century American literature. Poet, critic, Boswell of the Lost Generation of which he himself was a member, savior of Faulkner's dwindling reputation, editor of Kerouac's On the Road, discoverer of John Cheever, Cowley knew everybody and wrote about them with sharp insight. . . . . Cowley's writings on the great books are as important as the books themselves . . . . All American literature collections should own this."[citation needed]

To the end, Cowley remained a humanitarian in the world of letters. He wrote writer Louise Bogan in 1941, "I'm almost getting pathologically tender-hearted. I have been caused so much pain by reviewers and political allrightniks of several shades of opinion that I don't want to cause pain to anybody."[17]

Marriages and death edit

Cowley married artist Peggy Baird; they were divorced in 1931. His second wife was Muriel Maurer. Together they had one son, Robert William Cowley, who is an editor and military historian.[citation needed]

He died of a heart attack March 27, 1989.[1]

Correspondence edit

  • Malcolm, Cowley, The Long Voyage: Selected Letters of Malcolm Cowley, 1915–1987, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2014
  • Paul, Jay (1989). The selected correspondence of Kenneth Burke and Malcolm Cowley, 1915-1981. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-06899-5.
  • Malcolm Cowley, The Faulkner-Cowley File: Letters and Memories, 1944-1962, New York: Viking, 1966

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This was the 1980 award for paperback Autobiography.
    From 1980 to 1983 in National Book Award history there were dual hardcover and paperback awards in most categories, and multiple nonfiction subcategories. Most of the paperback award-winners were reprints, including this one.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Inventory of the Malcolm Cowley Papers {...}". The Newberry Library. Retrieved October 17, 2013. With short biography.
  2. ^ a b c d e Krebs, Albin (May 29, 1989). "Malcolm Cowley, Writer, Is Dead at 90". The New York Times. p. A1.
  3. ^ Cowley, Malcolm (1929). Blue Juniata. Plimpton Press. p. 50.
  4. ^ Hemingway, Ernest (1996). A Moveable Feast. Scribner.
  5. ^ Kirbach, Benjamin (2016). "Institutional Itinerancy: Malcolm Cowley and the Domestication of Cosmopolitanism". In Glass, Loren (ed.). After the Program Era: The Past, Present, and Future of Creative Writing in the University. The University of Iowa Press. p. 39. ISBN 978-1-60938-439-5.
  6. ^ Cowley, Malcolm (1951). Exile's Return (Revised ed.). Viking Press. p. 27.
  7. ^ a b Kenneth Schuyler Lynn, Hemingway, (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press) 1995.
  8. ^ Benfey, Christopher (February 28, 2014). "Review of The Long Voyage: Selected Letters of Malcolm Cowley, 1915-1987, Hans Bak (ed.)". The New Republic.
  9. ^ Worldcat: The sacred hill <La colline inspirée>
  10. ^ Garrison (1989), pp. xiii, 252
  11. ^ Benfey, Christopher (February 28, 2014). "Review of The Long Voyage: Selected Letters of Malcolm Cowley, 1915-1987, Hans Bak (ed.)". The New Republic.
  12. ^ McGurl, Mark (2009). The Program Era: Postwar Fiction and the Rise of Creative Writing. Harvard University Press. pp. 244–45.
  13. ^ Warren, Robert Penn (1966). "Introduction". In Robert Penn Warren (ed.). Faulkner: A Collection of Critical Essays. Prentice Hall. p. 10.
  14. ^ Cowley, Malcolm (1951). Exile's Return (Revised ed.). Viking Press. p. 289.
  15. ^ Kirbach, Benjamin (2016). "Institutional Itinerancy: Malcolm Cowley and the Domestication of Cosmopolitanism". In Glass, Loren (ed.). After the Program Era: The Past, Present, and Future of Creative Writing in the University. The University of Iowa Press. pp. 39–51. ISBN 978-1-60938-439-5.
  16. ^ "National Book Awards – 1980". National Book Foundation. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  17. ^ Letter to poet/novelist Louise Bogan, Swann Auction Galleries, Sale 2157: Modern Literature Featuring Americans in Paris. New York, October 16, 2008; private collection.

External links edit

  • John McCall (Fall 1982). "Malcolm Cowley, The Art of Fiction No. 70". Paris Review. Fall 1982 (85).
  • Cowley Family Tree
  • Malcolm Cowley papers at the Newberry Library
  • Ruth Nuzum Malcolm Cowley Research Collection at the Newberry Library
  • Malcolm Cowley at Library of Congress Authorities — with 80 catalog records

malcolm, cowley, author, under, volcano, malcolm, lowry, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newsp. For the author of Under the Volcano see Malcolm Lowry This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Malcolm Cowley news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Malcolm Cowley August 24 1898 March 27 1989 was an American writer editor historian poet and literary critic His best known works include his first book of poetry Blue Juniata 1929 and his memoir Exile s Return 1934 rev 1951 written as a chronicler and fellow traveller of the Lost Generation and an influential editor and talent scout at Viking Press Malcolm CowleyCowley photographed by Carl Van Vechten 1963Born 1898 08 24 August 24 1898 1 Belsano Pennsylvania U S DiedMarch 27 1989 1989 03 27 aged 90 New Milford Connecticut U S OccupationWriterAlma materHarvard University Literature portal Contents 1 Early life 2 Life in Paris 3 Early career and involvement in politics 4 Editorial career and academia 5 Marriages and death 6 Correspondence 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksEarly life editCowley was born August 24 1898 in Belsano Cambria County Pennsylvania to William Cowley and Josephine Hutmacher 2 He grew up in the East Liberty neighborhood of Pittsburgh where his father William was a homeopathic doctor Cowley attended Shakespeare Street elementary school and in 1915 graduated from Peabody High School where his boyhood friend Kenneth Burke was also a student Cowley s first published writing appeared in his high school newspaper 2 He attended Harvard University but his studies were interrupted when he joined the American Field Service during World War I to drive ambulances and munitions trucks for the French army He returned to Harvard in 1919 and became editor of The Harvard Advocate He graduated with a B A in 1920 2 Life in Paris editCowley was one of the many literary and artistic figures who migrated to Paris in the 1920s He became one of the best known chroniclers of the American expatriates in Europe as he frequently spent time with writers like Ernest Hemingway F Scott Fitzgerald John Dos Passos Ezra Pound Gertrude Stein E E Cummings Edmund Wilson Erskine Caldwell and others associated with American literary modernism In Blue Juniata Cowley described these Americans who travelled abroad during the postwar period as a wandering landless uprooted generation 3 similarly Hemingway claiming to have taken the phrase from Gertrude Stein called them the lost generation 4 This sense of uprootedness deeply affected Cowley s appreciation for the necessities of artistic freedom It moreover informed his ideal of cosmopolitanism in contrast to the fervent nationalism s that had led to World War I 5 Cowley recounted his experiences in Exile s Return writing our whole training was involuntarily directed toward destroying whatever roots we had in the soil toward eradicating our local and regional peculiarities toward making us homeless citizens of the world 6 While Cowley associated with many American writers in Europe the sense of admiration was not always mutual Hemingway removed direct reference to Cowley in a later version of The Snows of Kilimanjaro replacing his name with the description that American poet with a pile of saucers in front of him and a stupid look on his potato face talking about the Dada movement 7 John Dos Passos s private correspondence revealed the contempt he held for Cowley but also the care writers took to hide their personal feelings in order to protect their careers once Cowley had become an editor of The New Republic 7 Regardless Exile s Return was one of the first autobiographical texts to foreground the American expatriate experience Despite not selling well during its first publication it established Cowley as one of the most trenchant emissaries of the Lost Generation Literary historian Van Wyck Brooks described Exile s Return as an irreplaceable literary record of the most dramatic period in American literary history citation needed Early career and involvement in politics editWhile in Paris Cowley found himself drawn to the avant garde sensibilities of Dada and also like many other intellectuals of the period to Marxism and its attempts to demystify the socioeconomic and political conditions that had plunged Europe into a devastating war 2 He travelled frequently between Paris and Greenwich Village in New York and through these intersecting social circles came into close proximity though he never officially joined with the U S Communist Party In 1929 Cowley became an associate editor of the left leaning magazine The New Republic which he steered in a resolutely communist direction 8 The same year he translated and wrote a foreword to the 1913 French novel La Colline Inspiree by Maurice Barres 9 By the early 1930s Cowley became increasingly involved in radical politics In 1932 he joined Edmund Wilson Mary Heaton Vorse and Waldo Frank as union sponsored observers of the miners strikes in Kentucky Their lives were threatened by the mines owners and Frank was badly beaten 10 When Exile s Return was first published in 1934 it put forth a distinctly Marxist interpretation of history and social struggle In 1935 Cowley helped to establish a leftist collective The League of American Writers Other notable members included Archibald MacLeish Upton Sinclair Clifford Odets Langston Hughes Carl Sandburg Carl Van Doren Waldo Frank David Ogden Stewart John Dos Passos Lillian Hellman and Dashiell Hammett Cowley was appointed Vice President and over the next few years became involved in numerous campaigns including attempts to persuade the United States government to support the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War He resigned in 1940 owing to concerns that the organization was too heavily influenced by the Communist Party In 1941 near the outset of the United States involvement in World War II President Franklin D Roosevelt appointed Cowley s associate poet and popular front interventionist Archibald MacLeish as head of the War Department s Office of Facts and Figures precursor to the Office of War Information MacLeish recruited Cowley as an analyst This decision resulted in anti communist journalists such as Whittaker Chambers and Westbrook Pegler publicly exposing Cowley s left wing sympathies Cowley soon found himself in the crosshairs of congressman Martin Dies D Tex and the House Un American Activities Committee Dies accused Cowley of belonging to seventy two communist or communist front organizations 11 This number was certainly an exaggeration but Cowley had no recourse to deny it MacLeish soon came under pressure from J Edgar Hoover and the Federal Bureau of Investigation to dismiss Cowley In January 1942 MacLeish sent his reply that the FBI needed a course of instruction in history Don t you think it would be a good thing if all investigators could be made to understand that Liberalism is not only not a crime but actually the attitude of the President of the United States and the greater part of his Administration he said citation needed Nevertheless Cowley resigned two months later vowing to never write about politics again Editorial career and academia editIn 1944 having been more or less silenced politically Cowley began a career as a literary advisor editor and talent scout at Viking Press He was hired to work on the Portable Library series which had started in 1943 with As You Were A Portable Library of American Prose and Poetry Assembled for Members of the Armed Forces and Merchant Marine In its inception the Portable Library was an anthology of paperback reprints that could be mass produced cheaply and marketed to military personnel It also emphasized an American literary tradition that could be construed as patriotic during wartime Yet Cowley was able to steer the series toward what were in his esteem underappreciated writers He first set out to edit The Portable Hemingway 1944 At the time Hemingway was largely considered to be a sparse and simplistic writer Cowley departed from this perception in his introductory essay claiming instead that Hemingway could be read as tortured and submerged This revaluation remains the dominant critical opinion today Literary critic Mark McGurl argues that Hemingway s tip of the iceberg style has become one of the most emulated in twentieth century American prose his name all but synonymous with the pathos of understatement and the value of craft as represented by the practice of multiple revision 12 The Portable Hemingway sold so well that Cowley was able to convince Viking to publish a Portable Faulkner in 1946 William Faulkner was at the time slipping into literary obscurity By the 1930s he was working as a Hollywood screenwriter and in danger of seeing his works go out of print Cowley again argued for a dramatic revaluation of Faulkner s position in American letters enlisting him as an honorary member of the Lost Generation Robert Penn Warren called The Portable Faulkner the great watershed moment for Faulkner s reputation and many scholars view Cowley s essay as having resuscitated Faulkner s career 13 Faulkner won a Nobel Prize in 1949 He later said I owe Malcolm Cowley the kind of debt no man could ever repay 2 Cowley then published a revised edition of Exile s Return in 1951 The revisions downplayed some of the more overtly Marxist tenets and more obviously emphasized the return of the exile as a necessary step toward reestablishing a nation s solidarity the old pattern of alienation and reintegration or departure and return that is repeated in scores of European myths and continually re embodied in life Cowley wrote 14 This time the book sold much better Cowley also published a Portable Hawthorne 1948 The Literary Tradition 1954 and edited a new edition of Leaves of Grass 1959 by Walt Whitman These were followed by Black Cargoes A History of the Atlantic Slave Trade 1962 Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age 1966 Think Back on Us 1967 Collected Poems 1968 Lesson of the Masters 1971 and A Second Flowering 1973 Cowley taught creative writing at the college level beginning in the 1950s Among his students were Larry McMurtry Peter S Beagle Wendell Berry as well as Ken Kesey whose One Flew Over the Cuckoo s Nest 1962 Cowley helped publish at Viking Writing workshops were a recent development at the time the Iowa Writers Workshop was founded in 1936 yet by midcentury their proliferation was of note for both writers and publishers Cowley taught also at Yale Michigan Minnesota Washington California at Irvine and Berkeley and even the prestigious Stegner Fellowship at Stanford among other places but he seldom maintained a full time teaching appointment Literary and cultural critic Benjamin Kirbach argues that this flitting back and forth between universities and the publishing industry allowed Cowley to reconcile his cosmopolitan ideal within the constraints of the academy Kirbach writes Cowley s itinerancy his seemingly effortless movement between universities and the publishing industry between writers individual and collective played a crucial role in institutionalizing literary modernism in the twentieth century 15 As an editorial consultant to Viking Press he pushed for the publication of Jack Kerouac s On the Road Cowley s work anthologizing 28 Fitzgerald short stories and editing a reissue of Tender Is the Night restructured based on Fitzgerald s notes both in 1951 were key to reviving Fitzgerald s reputation as well and his introduction to Sherwood Anderson s Winesburg Ohio written in the early 1960s is said to have had a similar effect on Anderson s reputation Other works of literary and critical importance include Eight More Harvard Poets 1923 A Second Flowering Works amp Days of the Lost Generation 1973 And I Worked at the Writer s Trade 1978 and The Dream of the Golden Mountains Remembering the 1930s 1980 citation needed And I Worked won a 1980 U S National Book Award in the one year category Autobiography 16 a When The Portable Malcolm Cowley Donald Faulkner editor was published in 1990 the year after Cowley s death Michael Rogers wrote in Library Journal Though a respected name in hardcore literary circles in general the late Cowley is one of the unsung heroes of 20th century American literature Poet critic Boswell of the Lost Generation of which he himself was a member savior of Faulkner s dwindling reputation editor of Kerouac s On the Road discoverer of John Cheever Cowley knew everybody and wrote about them with sharp insight Cowley s writings on the great books are as important as the books themselves All American literature collections should own this citation needed To the end Cowley remained a humanitarian in the world of letters He wrote writer Louise Bogan in 1941 I m almost getting pathologically tender hearted I have been caused so much pain by reviewers and political allrightniks of several shades of opinion that I don t want to cause pain to anybody 17 Marriages and death editCowley married artist Peggy Baird they were divorced in 1931 His second wife was Muriel Maurer Together they had one son Robert William Cowley who is an editor and military historian citation needed He died of a heart attack March 27 1989 1 Correspondence editMalcolm Cowley The Long Voyage Selected Letters of Malcolm Cowley 1915 1987 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2014 Paul Jay 1989 The selected correspondence of Kenneth Burke and Malcolm Cowley 1915 1981 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06899 5 Malcolm Cowley The Faulkner Cowley File Letters and Memories 1944 1962 New York Viking 1966See also editList of ambulance drivers during World War I Letters to Cowley from Yvor Winters in The Selected Letters of Yvor Winters ed R L Barth Athens OH Swallow Press Ohio UP 2000 Notes edit This was the 1980 award for paperback Autobiography From 1980 to 1983 in National Book Award history there were dual hardcover and paperback awards in most categories and multiple nonfiction subcategories Most of the paperback award winners were reprints including this one References edit a b Inventory of the Malcolm Cowley Papers The Newberry Library Retrieved October 17 2013 With short biography a b c d e Krebs Albin May 29 1989 Malcolm Cowley Writer Is Dead at 90 The New York Times p A1 Cowley Malcolm 1929 Blue Juniata Plimpton Press p 50 Hemingway Ernest 1996 A Moveable Feast Scribner Kirbach Benjamin 2016 Institutional Itinerancy Malcolm Cowley and the Domestication of Cosmopolitanism In Glass Loren ed After the Program Era The Past Present and Future of Creative Writing in the University The University of Iowa Press p 39 ISBN 978 1 60938 439 5 Cowley Malcolm 1951 Exile s Return Revised ed Viking Press p 27 a b Kenneth Schuyler Lynn Hemingway Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1995 Benfey Christopher February 28 2014 Review of The Long Voyage Selected Letters of Malcolm Cowley 1915 1987 Hans Bak ed The New Republic Worldcat The sacred hill lt La colline inspiree gt Garrison 1989 pp xiii 252 Benfey Christopher February 28 2014 Review of The Long Voyage Selected Letters of Malcolm Cowley 1915 1987 Hans Bak ed The New Republic McGurl Mark 2009 The Program Era Postwar Fiction and the Rise of Creative Writing Harvard University Press pp 244 45 Warren Robert Penn 1966 Introduction In Robert Penn Warren ed Faulkner A Collection of Critical Essays Prentice Hall p 10 Cowley Malcolm 1951 Exile s Return Revised ed Viking Press p 289 Kirbach Benjamin 2016 Institutional Itinerancy Malcolm Cowley and the Domestication of Cosmopolitanism In Glass Loren ed After the Program Era The Past Present and Future of Creative Writing in the University The University of Iowa Press pp 39 51 ISBN 978 1 60938 439 5 National Book Awards 1980 National Book Foundation Retrieved March 16 2012 Letter to poet novelist Louise Bogan Swann Auction Galleries Sale 2157 Modern Literature Featuring Americans in Paris New York October 16 2008 private collection External links editJohn McCall Fall 1982 Malcolm Cowley The Art of Fiction No 70 Paris Review Fall 1982 85 Malcolm Cowley s Childhood Home Cowley Family Tree Malcolm Cowley papers at the Newberry Library Ruth Nuzum Malcolm Cowley Research Collection at the Newberry Library Malcolm Cowley at Library of Congress Authorities with 80 catalog records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Malcolm Cowley amp oldid 1173661083, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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