Friday, September 24, 2010

Authors and Alcohol

by Jena Ellis and Jean Henry Mead

I regularly receive requests for interviews and guest blogs, the most unusual an article from Jena Ellis of the Online Certificate Program. Originally titled "10 Famous Writers Who Didn’t Die From Suicide or Alcohol," I decided to rename the piece and include alcoholic writers of the past.

Among the better known writers addicted to alcohol were: Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Charles Bukowski, William Faulkner, Jack Kerouac, Truman Capote, Edgar Allen Poe, Dorothy Parker, Dylan Thomas, O. Henry, John Cheever, Raymond Chandler and Hunter Thompson. I was surprised to find John Steinbeck and Jack London among them.

Many great 20th century writers, Americans in particular, struggled with alcohol addiction. Some apparently believed that liquor contributed to their creative talents, while others used it as medication for emotional problems. I wonder whether writers have a higher incidence of addictions than the general public. If anyone knows, please feel free to comment.

Jena's list of writers who did not succumb to alcohol and suicide includes:

Isaac Asimov achieved a lot during his 72 years. In addition to being a professor of biochemistry, he was a titan in the sci-fi world, with his name on more than 500 books as author or editor. The epic Foundation series was one of the most popular and acclaimed works, and his Three Laws of Robotics became a foundational bedrock for many of his writings. He also produced a number of history volumes in later life, examining the Greeks, the Romans, and the Egyptians. He received multiple awards and more than a dozen honorary doctorates in lengthy and influential career. He died in 1992 after some earlier health problems, including a heart attack, and years later it was revealed that some of the complications were a result of HIV contracted during a blood transfusion.

Patricia Highsmith was born in Fort Worth, Texas, in 1921. She was acclaimed for her suspenseful psychological thrillers, most notably the Tom Ripley franchise. Her debut novel was Strangers on a Train, adapted to a successful film by Alfred Hitchcock, and The Talented Mr. Ripley would go on to inspire multiple film versions. Highsmith, a lesbian, often created works with gay undertones, marking her as one of the more progressive authors of the mid-20th century. She wound up publishing 22 novels and eight short-story collections before dying of leukemia in 1995 at age 74.

James Baldwin was another gay writer notable for tackling issues of sex and race long before others were so open about it. He debuted with the semi-autobiographical Go Tell It on the Mountain in 1953, and would go on to explore race and class and a variety of other issues with his incisive essays and fiction work. He also became active in the civil rights movement, and his 1972 nonfiction work No Name in the Street examined the movement and the death of major leaders Malcolm X, Medgar Evers, and Martin Luther King Jr. Baldwin died at age 63 in 1987 from esophageal cancer, leaving behind an influential body of work that continues to challenge and inspire.

L. Frank Baum left an indelible mark on children’s literature with The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, which remains a classic thanks in no small part to the beloved 1939 film. What some forget that is that Baum also wrote thirteen sequels to create an immensely detailed fantasy franchise, and he wrote scores of other novels, short stories, and poetry. Baum campaigned for women’s suffrage. He died of a stroke in 1919, not long before he would have turned 63.

Ken Kesey was a prominent counterculture figure during the tumultuous 1960s, though he considered himself something of a lost man between the earlier beatniks and later hippies. After a small start, Kesey gained prominence in 1962 with One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, which he was inspired to write after working the night shift at a veterans’ hospital. It became an instant success and was soon adapted to a stage play, followed in 1975 by the classic film version starring Jack Nicholson. His Sometimes a Great Notion ws released in 1964 and joined a few other counter cultural dignitaries (including Neal Cassady) to form the “Merry Pranksters.” A believer in art until the end of his days, his final major work was a Rolling Stone essay published shortly after 9/11 in which he advocated peace. He died in November 2001 after a series of health problems. He was 66.

Pearl S. Buck was the daughter of Southern Presbyterian missionaries. She grew up in China and spent a large part of her life there. Seeing events like the Boxer Rebellion and the Nanking Incident firsthand had an effect on her, influencing her humanitarian efforts. Her 1931 novel, The Good Earth, was the bestselling book in the U.S. for that year and the next, and the story about a Chinese village won her the Pulitzer in 1932. Yet her diverse bibliography includes many more novels and a host of nonfiction titles, many about China, and a variety of short story collections. She died in 1973 of lung cancer at the age of 80, and her name remains synonymous with smart, passionate writing about justice and humanity.

Ralph Ellison won a National Book Award for Invisible Man, his 1952 novel about what it meant to be black in America in the early 20th century. The novel is regarded as one of the best in modern literature, but Ellison was also noted for his critical writings. Shadow and Act, from 1964, is an essay collection spanning twenty years of life and reflection on culture and class. He lived to be 80, dying in 1994 of pancreatic cancer. Some of his unfinished works were published posthumously.

Michael Crichton died in 2008 at the age of 66 after a quiet battle with cancer. He left behind an impressive body of sci-fi and adventure fiction that probed the meaning of humanity and the cost of technological advancement. He remains the only artist ever to have No. 1 hits simultaneously in TV, movies, and books, a feat he accomplished in 1994 with (respectively) ER, Jurassic Park, and Disclosure. His career gathered steam in the 1970s and ’80s with thrillers like The Andromeda Strain, The Terminal Man, and Sphere, and in later life he became a prominent public speaker on a variety of scientific subjects, including the complexity of global warming.

Philip K. Dick was easily one of the most influential and pioneering writers in science fiction — not to mention one of the most adapted, with nine of his stories turned into films —He's known for creating fantastical, intriguing worlds that use outlandish ideas to explore our own. The Man in the High Castle, set in a world in which the Axis won World War II, is a harrowing examination of authoritarian control, while stories like “We Can Remember It For You Wholesale” and “The Minority Report” dealt with memory and fate in compelling ways. Unfortunately, many mainstream audiences and critics didn’t begin to embrace his work until it was almost too late. Dick died after susffering a stroke in March 1982, at the age of 53, having written dozens of novels and more than 100 short stories.

Marion Zimmer Bradley was born during the Great Depression. She began publishing fantasy novels and short stories in the 1950s. She created a series of works set on the fictional planet of Darkover, and she also wrote myriad other works in straightforward and pulp styles, but she’s best known for her 1982 novel The Mists of Avalon, which retells the stories of King Arthur from the points of view of the female characters. The work explored the potential oppression that can come with the spread of religion, and the perpetual battle between a character’s fate and their free will. She died in 1999 at age 69 after several years of failing health. Her impressive bibliography contains some of the most popular fantasy writing in recent memory.

2 comments:

Mark W. Danielson said...

I truly miss Michael Crichton. There are plenty of good authors who don't depend on drugs or alcohol. I doubt that alcohol has ever helped an author write a book, but I do believe it may create situations in which to write about. Intersting topic, Jean.

Jean Henry Mead said...

Thanks, Mark. I was really kind of shocked to learn how many well known writers were addicted to alcohol and maybe drugs. Hemingway once said that he never drank while he wrote and that he could tell when reading Faulkner's work at which point in the plot he had started drinking.