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, July 25 ~
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Stormy Weather : Happy Deathday Ms. Welty!

Hello there, dear readers!

Over the weekend we had some stormy weather and our lines were down! So… we’re playing a bit of catch-up today!

On July 23rd, in 2001, 6-time winner of the O. Henry Award for Short Stories, National Medal for Literature and A1969 Pulitzer Prize winner Eudora Welty died in her Mississippi home at the age of 92.

                          

Welty is certainly one of the strongest voices in Southern Gothic lit.

Though she only wrote 5 novels and numerous volumes of short stories, with Welty it is purely a matter of quality vs. quantity. Her writing is richly descriptive and darkly humorous. Her talent for comedy aside, the most surprising gift that Welty has offered her readers, and the text that speaks most directly about her work as a writer, came to fruition in 1983, when Welty agreed to deliver the first annual Massey Lectures in the History of American Civilization at Harvard University.

Our favorite works include her 1984 memoir “One Writer’s Beginnings”, “The Optimist’s Daughter” and her first collection of short stories “A Curtain of Green”  which was published in 1941. Of late, we have recently read “Losing Battles”, written in 1970, and it has steadily become a favorite as well!

If you are interested in Eudora Welty’s full biography and works, we recommend a visit to  the Eudora Welty Foundation, our resource for all things Eudora!

Today, we encourage our readers to reflect on why they love to read and/or write. What first drew your attention to the words on the pages in front you… Ms. Welty often reflected on things like this and drew on her personal experiences to craft her marvelous stories. So… write about your origins as a writer!

Write on in peace, Ms. Welty!

Tags: eudora welty, writer, dead writer, 2001 pulitzer prize dead writers club deathday southern gothic flannery o'connor william faulkner
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~ Saturday, October 16 ~
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We Do Not Do This Very Often, But…

… Happy Birthday Mr. Wilde!

How could we possibly resist wishing our very dear friend, Oscar Wilde, a happy 156th Birthday!!

       

Wilde is a man who needs no formal introduction, though he would most likely give himself one, were he here. Of course, we will be honoring him further on his deathday, this November, but as we do host an annual birthday party for this literary rockstar, we felt it befitting to give him a proverbial “shout out” here at our humble little blog.

Even Google is paying their respects to the notorious Irish writer today with a special logo tribute to Dorian Gray!

         

So- we strongly suggest our readers take a minute to wish Mr. Wilde a lovely birthday and proceed to celebrate in whichever debaucherous fashion you see fit. Be responsible and make no apologies for your own timeless loveliness… Oscar certainly wouldn’t have.

Happy Birthday, Mr. Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde!

Tags: birthday, writer, Oscar Wilde 156 years old dead writer dead writers club irish playwright dorian gray the importance of being earnest october 16th 1854
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