reviews_and_ramblings (
reviews_and_ramblings) wrote2011-01-13 09:00 am
Fanny Heaslip Lea (October 30, 1884 - January 13, 1955)
Fannie Heaslip Lea (October 30, 1884, New Orleans, Louisiana - January 13, 1955, New York, New York) was an American author and poet, best known for her poem "The Dead Faith". Fannie Heaslip Lea, the daughter of a newspaperman (James J. Lea) and Margaret Heaslip Lea, quickly took up the journalist's trade. She wrote class poems and plays and edited the Newcomb College (New Orleans) yearbook. After receiving a B.A. from Newcomb in 1904, Lea did graduate work in English at Tulane University in Louisiana for two years. From 1906 to 1911, she wrote feature articles for the New Orleans daily newspapers and short stories for national magazines such as Harper's and Woman's Home Companion.
After her marriage with Hamilton P. Agee in 1911, she moved with her husband to Honolulu, where he had accepted a position. She continued to write prolifically, undeterred by the birth of a daughter. After her divorce from Agee in 1926, she took up residence in New York, where she published 19 novels and more than 100 stories, poems, and essays in newspapers and journals like Good Housekeeping, Collier's, and the Saturday Evening Post. An Episcopalian, Lea was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and the Authors' League of America and a regular contributor to philanthropies.
Lea's first novel, Quicksands
The rather conventional romance that is the basis of this and most of Lea's stories is considerably enlivened by her sparkling and realistic dialogue. Lea had a good ear for clever conversations and the ability to create well-rounded characters, such as Rosemary and the writer, from whom such talk seems natural.
Romance and marriage were the staples of Lea's plots, especially in her short stories, but she was also inventive in exploring that theme from varied perspectives. Many of her independent heroines struggle with the conflicting lures of career and marriage, as in With or without
Lea also wrote several plays. Her first, Round-About, was produced in 1929 by the New York Theater Assembly. Her two collections of verse are light and entertaining, but generally undistinguished. Lea was one of the league of popular romancers whose novels and short stories never failed to delight her readers. Always intent on entertaining, she had a gift for believable characterization, pointed dialogue, and romantic comedy. Her medium was essentially slight, and she rarely transcended it, but her graceful style and wit distinguish her among popular writers.
The papers of Fannie Heaslip Lea are housed in the University of Oregon Library in Eugene, Oregon.
First Book - Quicksands (1911): Quicksands
Last Book - Verses for Lovers (and Some Others) (1955): Verses for lovers, And some others
Source: http://www.novelguide.com/a/discover/aww_03/aww_03_00706.html

