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| The home and garden of internationally acclaimed author Eudora Welty
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After her college years, Welty worked at a local radio station, wrote newspaper stories for the Memphis Commercial Appeal, and served as a Junior Publicity Agent for the Works Progress Administration. She published her first story, "Death of a Traveling Salesman," in 1936--the editor of Manuscript literary magazine called it "one of the best stories we have ever read." Between 1936 and 1941, Welty published many a story, and in 1941 those stories were collected in a book called A Curtain of Green. She would go on to publish The Robber Bridegroom, The Wide Net, The Golden Apples, The Bride of the Innisfallen, and Losing Battles. In 1973 Welty won the Pulitzer Prize for her novel The Optimist's Daughter. Welty's autobiography One Writer's Beginnings was published in 1984 by Harvard University Press and was a nationwide best seller. Her numerous honors included membership in the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Fellowship of Southern Writers. She has received the National Medal of Freedom, the National Medal of Arts, and the French Legion d'Honneur. All these honors eloquently testify to Eudora Welty's stature in American letters. As Reynolds Price in 1969 observed, no one in America "has yet shown stronger, richer, more useful fiction," and Price added that Welty's work called to mind the fiction of Turgenev, Tolstoy, and Chekhov as her "peers for breadth and depth." An accomplished photographer as well as writer, Welty first exhibited her photographs at New York City's Lugene Galleries in 1936. Her photograph book One Time, One Place was published in 1971, and more photographs have subsequently been published in books titled Photographs (1989) and Country Churchyards (2000). The death of Eudora Welty on July 23,
2001, was a tremendous loss for her readers, for those who love her
photographs, for her family, and for her legion of friends. But her
photographs will continue to shape our vision of the South, and her
voice will still be heard. It will be heard in high schools and university
classrooms across America and the world; it will be heard by scholars
who devote their lives to the study of her fiction; and it will be heard
by scores of individual readers, who find themselves powerfully responding
to works of imagination made for the imagination. Eudora Welty will
endure in the continuity of love readers everywhere feel for her life's
work. |
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Eudora Welty Foundation, Inc. The Eudora Welty House is administered by the Mississippi Department of Archives and History. |
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