The Dead Writers Club was born out of the fact that there are very few living writers out there that are worth reading. (Naturally, this is because we all yearn to live in the past)

Do you consistently feel as though you are living in the wrong time period? We do too.

This blog is a celebration of literature and the greats who wrote before us.
~ Monday, May 30 ~
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Five Deathdays Crammed Into One

Today is a tall order, so here we go…

On this day, May 30th, five writers passed under the great veil of the afterlife. Harlem Renaissance writer, Gwendolyn Bennett died in 1981. American poet, William Meredith died of respiratory failure in 2007. Beat poet and lover to Allen Ginsberg, Peter Orlovsky died just last year, 2010 from lung cancer. English poet, Alexander Pope died of unspecified causes on May 30th in 1744. And finally, the notorious French playwright and author, Voltaire, died on this day in 1778.

Gwendolyn Bennett was committed to the African-American arts community all her life, continually fostering the talents of young African American artists and energizing the Harlem Renaissance. During her undergraduate education at Columbia, Bennett’s poem “Nocturne” was published in Crisis in November, 1923, and in December of the same year, her poem “Heritage” was included in Opportunity, a magazine published by the National Urban League.

For more biographical information and a list of her complete works, click here. We highly recommend her first published piece, “Nocturne” and her short story “Wedding Day Fire!!”, published in 1926.

William Meredith was America’s Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 1978 through 1980, and was the first openly gay poet to receive this honor. He was also awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1988, for his work “Partial Accounts”, which we cannot praise enough.  Among his other achievements, one will find the Carl Sandburg Award, a Guggenheim Foundation fellowship, the International Vaptsarov Prize in Poetry and the Harriet Monroe Memorial Prize as well. Meredith’s work is moving and at times… mysterious. For more insight into what we mean, check out The William Meredith Foundation website for more bio information and works.

Peter Orlovsky was a Beat poet and well known writer amongst the “Allen Ginsberg” crowd. It may surprise you to know that Orlovsky dropped out of high school and was deemed unfit to serve on the front lines after being drafted into the US Army for the Korean War. This led him to work as a medic in a hospital… guess where it was… SAN FRANCISCO! Orlovsky, who had never been terribly interested in becoming a poet, began writing in 1957 at the encouragement of Ginsberg. In 1974, Orlovsky joined the faculty of the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics in Boulder, Colorado, where he taught poetry. While his volume of work is not staggering, his contributions to the Beat poetry scene can still be felt today. And we highly recommend his work Lepers Cry, published in 1972. 

English poet and satirist Alexander Pope  is best known for his work The Rape of the Lock, but is also well respected for his excellent translation of The Odyssey and his essays. While Pope was heavily influenced by Dryden, he was also industrious; and he spent eight or nine years in arduous discipline, reading, studying, experimenting with poetry before anything of his appeared in print. “Poetry his only business”, he said, “and idleness his only pleasure”. His first publication was his “Pastorals”, which are certainly worth a read through if you’ve never read them.

Lastly, but certainly not least, we give you… Voltaire. The famous French philosopher and wit is most remembered for his infamous criticisms of the church, his poetry and plays, and a plethora of books, most notably Candide. Voltaire was quite prolific, producing works in almost every literary form including plays, poetry, novels, essays, and historical and scientific works. He wrote more than 20,000 letters and more than 2,000 books and pamphlets! For more biographical information and a list of complete works, please check out the Voltaire Foundation via University of Oxford.  

These five writers came from different backgrounds and for the most part different time periods and cultures. But the one thing they all have in common, aside from the shared deathday, is that they will all be remembered for their unique literary contributions to this ever changing world. Let us never forget this wonderfully diverse deathday!

Enjoy Memorial Day and please remember to raise five glasses today in remembrance of these writers.

Write on in peace, Mrs. Bennett and Messrs. Voltaire, Pope, Meredith and Orlovsky!

Tags: peter orlovsky, may 30 1981 2007 gwendolyn bennett william meredith 2010 beat poetry deathdays dead writers club harlem renaissance 1744 alexander pope voltaire nocturne heritage
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~ Sunday, May 30 ~
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Tall Order Today…

Today is the deathday of several authors/poets that we would like to aknowledge!

We’ll start off by wishing François-Marie Arouet, or Voltaire as he is most commonly called, a very happy deathday! Voltaire, the famous French philosopher and wit, died on this day in 1778 at the age of 83! He is most remembered for his infamous criticisms of the church, his poetry and plays, and a plethora of books, most notably Candide.

                      

Secondly, we would like to wish Mr. Christopher Marlowe and happy deathday! Marlowe, the English playwright that many have thought to have been the true author of a handful of Shakespeare’s plays (see our facebook discussion), died on this day in 1593.

                             

Marlowe, a contemporary of William Shakespeare, was no where near as prolific a writer as Shakespeare, but was quite the dramatist in his own right, with such plays as Doctor Faustus and Dido, Queen of Carthage. It has long been suspected that his death was an assassination…but that’s a whole other story… long story short he was an atheist and quite possibly a homosexual in Elizabethan England. 

On this very day in 1744 English poet and satirist Alexander Pope died as well. He is best known for his work The Rape of the Lock, his excellent translation of The Odyssey and his essays.

       

Today is also the deathday of Harlem Renaissance writer Gwendolyn Bennett who died  on this day in 1981. She is best remembered for her poetry and her literary contributions to Opportunity: A Journal of Negro Life. Bennett was an assistant to the editor and columnist for this journal and also co-founded the literary journal Fire!!  which brought her into the Harlem arts circle. If you are interested in the literature of the Harlem Renaissance, Bennett is a poet you do not want to miss out on.

Phew… almost done…

Last but not least, novelist Mark Harris (Bang the Drum Slowly) and poet William Meredith (won the Pulitzer prize in 1988 for Partial Accounts) both died on this die in 2007. Meredith died of respiratory failure while Harris died from complications following pneumonia.

      

While these two writers wrote from opposite ends of the spectrum, we always find it interesting when two writers die on the same day of the same year.

All six of these writers came from different backgrounds and for the most part different time periods and cultures. But the one thing they all have in common, aside from the shared deathday, is that they will all be remembered for their unique literary contributions to this ever changing world. Let us never forget this wonderfully diverse deathday!

Enjoy the weekend and please remember to raise six glasses today in remembrance of these writers.

Write on in peace, Mrs. Bennett and Messrs. Voltaire, Marlowe, Pope, Meredith and Harris!

Tags: François-Marie Arouet voltaire deathday may 30 1778 candide wit writer dead writers club poetry novelist author playwrights christopher marlowe shakespeare 1593 homosexuality religion dido queen of carthage elizabethan england doctor faustus satirist alexander pope 1744 the rape of the lock harlem renaissance gwendolyn bennett negro life opportunity
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