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Creation Date
2-28-2025
Description
You might assume literary collections solely consist of manuscripts, notes, and research related to a writer’s creative output, but these collections can also include more unexpected items that reveal fresh insights about an artist’s life and work. Among the items on display are poet Sterling Plumpp’s notebook, featuring poems he wrote while serving jury duty in the fall of 1976, a young Eudora Welty’s crayon Valentine for her brother, Edward, Willie Morris’ menu from President Bill Clinton’s 1993 inaugural dinner, Beth Henley’s bespoke binder for the film adaptation of her play, Crimes of the Heart, and a piece of Square Book’s original upstairs porch. The Larry Brown Collection features a wide range of items that belonged to the writer, including fishing lures, a promotional beer koozie, a pocketknife, a guitar pick and strings, and hundreds of custom business cards. Also of note is a piece of Joan Didion’s personal stationery, where she strikes through her professional/maiden name in favor of her married name – a gesture, repeated across other pieces of correspondence, that demonstrates Didion negotiating her role as both writer and wife.
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