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3 Sgd Items: Thurber, Jesse Stuart, Henry Miller.

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles Start Price:40.00 USD Estimated At:80.00 - 120.00 USD
3 Sgd Items: Thurber, Jesse Stuart, Henry Miller.
[Literary Authors/Thurber/Stuart]. 3 Signed Letters. ++ James Thurber. TLS. Reads ?Dear Peckham: Nunnally Johnson stopped in to see me last week on his way to Rome by plane, and I told him about your visit and your columns and hope that he could write something for you about the fishing trips. But he has gone to Rome to make a picture and says he will be too tied up with that and other things to get around to his typewriter. I didn?t know that my other correspondent was Luke Short. Cordially yours.? Boldly signed ?thurber? (in crayon or with a black pencil). Dated ?April 8, 1959.? The New Yorker?s letterhead. 10 3/8? x 8 ??. Near fine with original envelope. Thurber (1894-1961) was a prolific American writer and cartoonist. His cartoons and written work were a mainstay of The New Yorker during the 1930s and 1940s. His best known stories include ?The Secret Life of Walter Mitty,? "Is Sex Necessary" (1929, with E. B. White), "My Life and Hard Times" (1933), "The Years with Ross" (1959), and the short story collections "The Middle Aged Man on the Flying Trapeze" and "The Thurber Carnival." ++ Henry Miller. ALS to his publisher. Reads ?Dear Mr. Wentworth- Only read about 100 pages so far. Interrupted momentarily by surgery-jaw. Will finish as soon as possible. Find many things to criticize, alas! Wish I had never seen the text- or rather that Mr. Gordon had consulted me before starting the book. More soon. ?Henry Miller.? Dated ?5/20/66.? Miller?s personal letterhead, 5 ?? x 8 ??. Near fine. Miller?s first 2 books ("Tropic of Cancer," 1934; and "Tropic of Capricorn," 1939) had to be published in Paris and smuggled into the US as a result of obscenity laws. The eventual publication of "Tropic of Cancer" in 1961 led to a series of trials that tested the obscenity laws which were common in the United States the time. The Supreme Court, in Grove Press v. Gerstein, cited Jacobellis v. Ohio to overrule a state court finding of obscenity. The ?Mr. Gordon? referred to in the ALS is presumably William Gordon, who wrote "The Mind and Art of Henry Miller" (first published 1967). ++ Jesse Hilton Stuart. TLS to journalist Deane Morrison. Reads, ?Mr. Morrison? Your mentioning my ?Esquire? stories? brings back old memories. So many people around here dind?t like them either. But our drugstore sold them, and it wasn?t an uncommon sight to see a man slip in and buy one, as if he were a little ashamed, and put it under his arm and walk out. Even the papers went after me over a few stories. So I would stay away, not see many people, until a story ?had died down.? That is, read and partly forgotten?? Dated ?Riverton, Ky. Nov. 12th, 1952.? Signed ?Jesse Stuart.? [2] leaves, single-sided. 11 1/8? x 7 3/8?. Very good with original envelope. Jesse Stuart (1906-1984) achieved prominence with his short stories, poetry, and novels. Born and raised in Greenup County, KY, Stuart relied heavily on the rural locale of northeastern Kentucky for his writing. He said that most of his stories were elaborations of true incidents that he observed or heard about. His plots and dialogue give a stereotypical view of the region. He was made poet laureate of Kentucky in 1954, and in 1961 received the award from the American Academy of Poets. His first novel was "Trees of Heaven" (1940). Stuart's "Taps for Private Tussie" (1943) sold over a million copies in only 2 years, and won the Thomas Jefferson Southern Award for the best Southern book of the year.