It's not a biography, but Melissa Bradshaw's book on Lowell, _Amy Lowell, Diva Poet_, published by Ashgate, won the 2012 MLA award for a book by an independent scholar and is well worth reading. Melissa J. Homestead Susan J. Rosowski Professor of English & Program Faculty in Women's & Gender Studies University of Nebraska-Lincoln 202 Andrews Hall Lincoln, NE 68588-0333 http://english.unl.edu/faculty/profs/mhomestead.html On 6/10/13 5:37 PM, "Becky Roorda" <[log in to unmask]> wrote: >Hi Diane, > >I'm so glad to hear of your ESS project. All the best with that, and I'll >be eagerly looking forward to it. > >To the List, > >I hope I didn't give the wrong impression in my other post about >Cather/Lowell. I said that they were "enemies"--and maybe that was too >strong, and also it was a bit tongue-in-cheek. I don't have anything >concrete to go on, except that they quite obviously had nothing to do >with each other--that, and Cather turned down a 1910 submission of >Lowell's at McClure's, and I can't imagine Lowell ever forgot it. Also, >evidently Greenslet suggested to Cather that she write Lowell's biography >(which comes under the category, "What was he thinking?!"), and Cather >wrote in a 1928 letter to Mary Austin that she would just as soon think >of writing a history of China as she would to write a biog of Amy Lowell. >I've only seen a summary/paraphrase of that one on the Archives website, >not the actual letter, but I'm thinking it must be a pip. I laughed out >loud at just the summary. > >Lowell is another one who absolutely deserves a good modern biographer >(her dates, 1874-1925). I fell in love with Amy when I read a 1935 >biography of her by S. Foster Damon--*Amy Lowell: A chronicle, with >extracts from her correspondence.* I thought Damon's biography was very >fair to her although somewhat hagiographic--but also very readable, >considering it was 1935. He definitely lets her personality come >through--and she's a wonder! When she was about five or six years old, >the little school children used to shout at her on the playground, "Shut >up, Amy Lowell!" and I don't think she ever did in her whole life--shut >up, that is. For anyone interested in Lowell, if you can find a copy of >Damon, it's definitely worth the read (I found mine used at Amazon). One >thing he said in the Introduction is that although he's been "frank about >Miss Lowell," he was often "reticent about her opponents," probably >because in 1935 many of those people were still living. There's a book >out! > (2012, I think) called *Amy Lowell Among Her Contemporaries* by Carl >Rollyson that I haven't yet seen. > >Becky >