Short Stories by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
Edited by Rodger L. Tarr In The Yearling, her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of 1939, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings wrote the bleak but noble life of the Florida Cracker into American hearts. She secured her popularity as a storyteller and her status as a major voice in American literature in 1942 with the instant success of Cross Creek, the autobiographical vignettes that highlight her ability to create short fiction. Still, no assessment of the full range and power of her talent has been possible without this volume of all twenty-three of her published short stories, collected together here for the first time. Most appeared in Scribner's Magazine, The New Yorker, Harper's Magazine and the Saturday Evening Post. Scribner's printed Rawlings's first short story, "Cracker Chidlings," in 1931, just three years after she moved to an orange grove in the backwoods of north-central Florida. With a mix of frontier morality, ingenuity, and humor, the story introduced readers to Fatty Blake's squirrel pilau and 'Shiner Tim's corn liquor. Just as important, it brought her work to the attention of Maxwell Perkins, the famous Scribner's editor, who recognized her talent for storytelling and her eye for detail and who encouraged her to capture human drama in more "Cracker" stories.
Rodger L. Tarr is distinguished professor of English at Illinois State University. He is the author of numerous books, most recently Max and Marjorie :The Correspondence between Maxwell E. Perkins and Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (UPF, 1999) and Poems by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings: Songs of a Housewife (UPF, 1997). 1994. 386pp. 6 X 9. Photographs, notes, index.
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"In Rawlings's 23 short pieces here collected for the first time, the message is that human character, happiness, and survival are as directly tied to the landscape outside one's window as they are to genes and up-bringing."--Miami Herald "[Rawlings is] among the first ten American story writers today."--The New Republic, 1940 |