Central Missouri
Central Missouri Some of the earliest writers to chronicle Missouri life lived in the center of the state, haveing followed the Missouri River to what was then a frontier. Alphonso Wetmore, according to historian Charles van Ravenswaay, was "the first writer to depict Missouri in terms of Missourians." As an army paymaster stationed in New Franklin in 1820's, he wrote under the name "Aurora Borealis." HisGazetteer of the State of Missouri, published in 1837, included sketches and anecdotes and concluded with a series of short stories. John Beauchamp Jones published Western Scenes and The Western Merchant while living in Arrow Rock in the 1830s. Emile Paillou grew up in Boonville and after moving to St. Louis published Home Town Sketches, a collection of more than 200 short "pen portraits," describing life as he had known it in Boonville in the years following the Civil War. As in St. Louis, newspaper reporters and editors in mid-Missouri contributed to the literary scene of their times. H.H. Hutchison of Boonville, editor of theBoonville Weekly Advertiser, published Old Nick Abroad and Other Poems. George T. Ferrel, whose admirers called him the "poet laureate of Missouri," worked on theBoonville Eagle and the Advertiser, as well as on Sedalia, Kansas City, and other papers. Walter Williams, a Boonville native and a noted journalist, was instrumental in founding the world's first school of journalism at the University of Missouri in Columbia. The Missouri Writers Guild, one of the oldest writers organizations in the United States, was founded in Columbia in 1915, incorporated in 1925, and now has chapters throughout the state. Jack Conroy, a native of Moberly, became famous for his realistic fiction and nonfiction works about the lives of American workers. The Disinherited, Conroy's powerful depiction of labor unrest and class conflict, is set in the Monkey Nest Coal Camp near Moberly. His distinguished career as a writer and editor, which included close associations with other writers such as the poet Gwendolyn Brooks, was the subject of a 1994 award-winning biography, Worker-Writer in America, by Douglas Wixon, a former University of Missouri-Rolla professor. Conroy's personal library is preserved in a special room at Moberly Area Community College. Moberly was also home to Elizabeth Seifert, author of 86 novels, many dealing with the lives of doctors and nurses. During her long career, Seifert was honored both in the U.S. and abroad; her books were translated into many languages and sold in more than 30 countries. The small town of Fulton, Missouri, has gained fame from the visits of world statesmen, including Winston Churchill and Mikhail Gorbachev, to Westminster College, but was knwon earlier from the success of native son Henry Bellamann's novel, King's Row, which was made into a film in 1942 starring Ronald Reagan. Interest in both the film and the novel revived during Reagan's presidency, bringing new attention to Fulton. Ward Dorrance, a native of Jefferson City and a cultural historian, essayist, and novelist, taught French at the University of Missouri. He captured the flavor and beauty of Missouri in Three Ozark Streams, We're From Missouri, and Where Rivers Meet. Frank Luther Mott, dean of the School of Journalism at the University of Missouri, wrote a five-volume History of Amreican Magazines, which won the Pulitzer and Bancroft prizes, and Golden Multitudes, a history of best sellers. The State Historical Society of Missouri and the University of Missouri in Columbia drew many eminent historians to central Missouri, among them Floyd Shoemaker and Lewis Atherton. Richard Brownlee, who followed Floyd Shoemaker as director of the State Historical Society, was a prominent Civil War historian. William Peden, a Virginia native who has spent many years in Columbia, is the author of Twilight at Monticello, a novel, and many short stories. He founded the University of Missouri Press, which today publishes about 60 books a year, including many by Missouri authors. Margaret Sayers Peden, emerita professor of Romance languages is an award-winning translator of Latin American writers including the works of Carlos Fuentes, Isabel Allende and Pablo Neruda William Trogdon, best known by his literary name, William Least Heat-Moon, travels across America to create works such as Blue Highways and Prairyerth, but maintains his home near Columbia, where he studied and taught at the University of Missouri and Stephens College.
I have to come to look upon the Missouri as more than a river. To me it is an epic....haunted with great memories. Perhaps never before in the history of the world has a river been the thoroughfare of a movement so tremendously epic in its relation to the development of man.---John Neihardt
Other writers lending diversity to the central Missouri literary scence are historian and poet Bob Dyer of Boonville, an authority on Civil War history and songs; storyteller Mitch Jayne of Columbia, author of Old Fish Hawk and other novels set in the Ozarks; poets Betty Cook Rottmann of Columbia and Walter Bargen of Ahsland; and mystery writer Polly Whitney, who divides her time between Columbia and New York. No mention of mid-Missouri literary culture is complete without reference to the American Audio Prose Library of Columbia, founded and directed by Kay Bonetti Callison. Since 1980, Callison has conducted more that 100 interviews with important prose writers and made these tapes available to booklovers throughout the United States. Her interviews are aired on radio stations across the country and have won three national broadcasting awards.
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