The Letters of Gertrude Stein and Thornton Wilder
The friendship and correspondence of Gertrude Stein and Thornton Wilder encompassed the last twelve years of Stein’s life and a period of major work by Wilder. A generation apart in age, the two writers met during Stein’s acclaimed American lecture tour in 1934-35, during which they shared the experience of lecturing to audiences in the wake of great success. The letters between Stein and Wilder contain ideas and plans about publications, attitudes toward fame and work, and thoughts about other artists and people near to them. They also refer to European-American cultural relations prior to and through World War II, show how Stein and Wilder responded to critical reception of their new work, and above all, examine how the two writers affected one another’s progress. It is clear from the letters that without their friendship, Stein’s Narration lectures would not have come about, The Geographical History and the novel Ida would have become different books. The edition includes a detailed chronology of Stein’s lecture tour, staging histories of Our Town and The Skin of Our Teeth, and an account of Stein in World War II with new documentation.
Edited by Edward M. Burns and Ulla E, Dydo with William Rice