Edna Ferber letter to Jules Eckert Goodman

Summary

Creator: Ferber, Edna, 1887-1968
Date(s): 1918 February 7
Call Number: MSS 0099, F0703
Language: Materials entirely in English.
Abstract: Typed and signed letter written by Edna Ferber to Jules Eckert Goodman on impressive pictorial letterhead of the Hotel Majestic, West Seventy-second Street at Central Park, New York, dated February 7, 1918.
Physical Description: 1 item (1 page)
Immediate Source of Acquisition: Purchase, 2003.
Processing Information: Processed and encoded by George Apodaca, March 2016. Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard

Biographical and Historical Notes

Edna Ferber (1887-1968)

Edna Ferber was born in Kalamazoo, Michigan, on August 15, 1887. Due to her father's poor business sense and the anti-Semitism of their neighbors, the Ferbers moved frequently around the Midwest. After graduating from high school in Appleton, Wisconsin, Ferber worked as a newspaper reporter, first for the Appleton Daily Crescent, then for the Milwaukee Journal. After suffering a nervous collapse, she returned home to Wisconsin where, during her recovery, she began to devote her energies to writing fiction.

Ferber's first short story, The Homely Heroine, appeared in Everybody's Magazine in 1910. Three collections of her stories, Roast Beef Medium (1913), Personality Plus (1914), and Emma McChesney and Company (1915), centered around the "new woman" character of Emma McChesney, a divorced, working mother. Although she refused to write any more McChesney stories after the 1915 collection, Ferber continued to publish short stories throughout her life, often as a respite from her longer novels. Other collections include Mother Knows Best (1927) and One Basket (1947).

After abandoning the McChesney stories, Ferber directed her attention toward writing novels. She had published her first novel, Dawn O'Hara, in 1911, but her first critically acclaimed work was The Girls (1921). She won the Pulitzer prize in 1925 for So Big (1924). Many of her books have achieved lasting fame in other mediums. Her novel Show Boat (1926) was adapted into the popular musical by Oscar Hammerstein and Jerome Kern, and Cimarron (1930) and Giant (1952) were both made into films. In addition to writing novels, Ferber collaborated with playwright George S. Kaufman on six dramas, including The Royal Family (1928), Dinner at Eight (1936), and Stage Door (1936). She also wrote two autobiographies: A Peculiar Treasure (1939) and A Kind of Magic (1963).

During her professional life, Ferber alternated between residences in Chicago and New York City. By the 1930s, Ferber lived primarily in New York, where she was a member of the Algonquin Round Table group. She died of cancer on April 17, 1968.

Sources

"Edna Ferber." Contemporary Literary Criticism, Vol 93. Detroit: Gale Research Co, 1996.

Ferber, Edna. A Peculiar Treasure. New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1939.

"Flora Mae Holly, Literary Agent" New York Times, 20 Nov., 1960: 86.

Reed, Paula. "Edna Ferber" American Novelists, 1910-1945. Dictionary of Literary Biography, Vol 9. Ed. James Martine. Detroit: Gale Research Co, 1981.

Content Description

Typed and signed letter written by Edna Ferber to Jules Eckert Goodman on impressive pictorial letterhead of the Hotel Majestic, West Seventy-second Street at Central Park, New York, dated February 7, 1918. The letter is addressed to American playwright, [Jules Eckert] Goodman, hoping to interest him in dramatizing one of her novels, Fanny Herself. Slight bleeding of ink on the "E" and the "F" of her signature.

Using these materials

Shelving Summary

Box 41, F0703: Shelved in SPEC MSS 0099 manuscript boxes.

Access Information

The collection is open for research.

Preferred Citation

MSS 0099, F0703, Ferber, Edna, letter to Jules Eckert Goodman, Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, Newark, Delaware.

Related Materials

This item forms part of MSS 0099 Miscellaneous Literary and Historical Manuscripts.

Conditions Governing Use

Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. Please contact Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, http://library.udel.edu/spec/askspec/

Container List

Edna Ferber letter to Jules Eckert Goodman, 1918 February 7 Box 41, F0703

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