Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Evan S. Connell
View through CrossRef
Evan S. Connell (b. 1924–d. 2013) was born in Kansas City, Missouri, and grew up there in a prosperous family with historical ties—reflected in his middle name, Shelby—to Confederate general Jo Shelby. Although his physician father expected his namesake son to join him in his medical practice, Connell, while at Dartmouth College, began to consider more creative options, including writing and making art. After a three-year stint in the U.S. Navy Air Corps during World War II—he never left the country—Connell began writing down his experiences and finished his undergraduate studies at the University of Kansas. On the Lawrence, Kansas, campus, he studied art and continued to write, under the tutelage of Ray B. West, who edited the Western Review. With aid from the G.I. Bill and encouragement from West, Connell successfully applied to Wallace Stegner’s first class of creative writing fellows at Stanford University. He spent another year in writing and art classes at Columbia University in New York. Ultimately, he saw more of a future in writing, though he kept up a practice of life drawing and painting for many years. Connell had an early run of published short stories, beginning in 1946. After a fallow period in California, Connell went to Paris in 1952, where he became acquainted with the founding editors of The Paris Review. The literary journal published three of Connell’s stories, including segments from Connell’s novel in progress, which eventually was titled Mrs. Bridge. By then, Connell had taken up residence in San Francisco. After rejection by several New York publishers, the Viking Press took on Connell, releasing a story collection in 1957 before cementing Connell’s reputation with Mrs. Bridge, a quietly evocative portrait of a prosperous, middle-American family, which became his most admired and lucrative work of fiction. Over the next five decades Connell veered into an extraordinary variety of works—fiction, nonfiction, history, and hybrid experiments that looked like epic poetry. This pattern of no pattern in the arc of Connell’s work, combined with his lack of interest in self-promotion, seemed to confuse the New York publishing world, and critics often cited his unpredictability as the cause of a kind of literary marginalization. His sprawling account of Custer at the Little Bighorn became hugely popular in the 1980s, raising his profile and reviving his reputation as a writer.
Title: Evan S. Connell
Description:
Evan S.
Connell (b.
1924–d.
2013) was born in Kansas City, Missouri, and grew up there in a prosperous family with historical ties—reflected in his middle name, Shelby—to Confederate general Jo Shelby.
Although his physician father expected his namesake son to join him in his medical practice, Connell, while at Dartmouth College, began to consider more creative options, including writing and making art.
After a three-year stint in the U.
S.
Navy Air Corps during World War II—he never left the country—Connell began writing down his experiences and finished his undergraduate studies at the University of Kansas.
On the Lawrence, Kansas, campus, he studied art and continued to write, under the tutelage of Ray B.
West, who edited the Western Review.
With aid from the G.
I.
Bill and encouragement from West, Connell successfully applied to Wallace Stegner’s first class of creative writing fellows at Stanford University.
He spent another year in writing and art classes at Columbia University in New York.
Ultimately, he saw more of a future in writing, though he kept up a practice of life drawing and painting for many years.
Connell had an early run of published short stories, beginning in 1946.
After a fallow period in California, Connell went to Paris in 1952, where he became acquainted with the founding editors of The Paris Review.
The literary journal published three of Connell’s stories, including segments from Connell’s novel in progress, which eventually was titled Mrs.
Bridge.
By then, Connell had taken up residence in San Francisco.
After rejection by several New York publishers, the Viking Press took on Connell, releasing a story collection in 1957 before cementing Connell’s reputation with Mrs.
Bridge, a quietly evocative portrait of a prosperous, middle-American family, which became his most admired and lucrative work of fiction.
Over the next five decades Connell veered into an extraordinary variety of works—fiction, nonfiction, history, and hybrid experiments that looked like epic poetry.
This pattern of no pattern in the arc of Connell’s work, combined with his lack of interest in self-promotion, seemed to confuse the New York publishing world, and critics often cited his unpredictability as the cause of a kind of literary marginalization.
His sprawling account of Custer at the Little Bighorn became hugely popular in the 1980s, raising his profile and reviving his reputation as a writer.
Related Results
Daniel O’Connell and American anti-slavery
Daniel O’Connell and American anti-slavery
In August 1875, at the O’Connell centenary celebrations in Boston, three famous American abolitionists recalled the importance of O’Connell’s role in the American anti-slavery move...
Legitimation as linchpin: On Raewyn Connell’s changing conceptualization of ‘hegemonic masculinity’
Legitimation as linchpin: On Raewyn Connell’s changing conceptualization of ‘hegemonic masculinity’
The concept of hegemonic masculinity maintains a distinctive status within the social sciences and humanities. Yet there never has been an examination of Connell’s changing concept...
Acorn non-dormancy disrupts Janzen-Connell effects on temperate white oaks
Acorn non-dormancy disrupts Janzen-Connell effects on temperate white oaks
Although the Janzen-Connell model recognizes high level of predation as
the main factor influencing propagule survival close to parent trees,
acorns of white oak species germinate ...
The Book of Evan: The work and life of Evan McAra Sherrard
The Book of Evan: The work and life of Evan McAra Sherrard
In many ways Evan McAra Sherrard was a Renaissance man: a master of not one but several trades - agriculture, education, ministry, and psychotherapy - and he liked the fact that he...
Coronal Heating as Determined by the Solar Flare Frequency Distribution Obtained by Aggregating Case Studies
Coronal Heating as Determined by the Solar Flare Frequency Distribution Obtained by Aggregating Case Studies
Abstract
Flare frequency distributions represent a key approach to addressing one of the largest problems in solar and stellar physics: determining the mechanism tha...
Assessment of Evan’s Index in North-Western Nigeria using Computerised Tomography
Assessment of Evan’s Index in North-Western Nigeria using Computerised Tomography
Aim: To determine the Evan’s Index of Nigerians using computerized tomography in Sokoto North-Western Nigeria.
Study Design: Retrospective cross- sectional.
Place and d...
“Come out of such a land, you Irishmen”
“Come out of such a land, you Irishmen”
This chapter examines Irish nationalism in the context of the debate over slavery and abolition. It focuses on the figure of Daniel O'Connell. O'Connell was by reputation Ireland's...
Reading Raewyn
Reading Raewyn
It has been 20 years since Raewyn Connell published The Men and the Boys (2000a), which can be seen as the foundational text of boyhood studies. This journal is a good place to cel...

