Biography
In
1936 when she was twenty-seven, Eudora Welty published her first short story.
A Curtain of Green, a collection of stories, followed a few years later.
During the 1940s she began to win major literary prizes, including two Guggenheim
Fellowships, published two novels and two more collections of stories, and wrote
many book reviews for the New York Times. During these years Welty traveled
in England, France, and Italy. The 1950s saw a third novel and a fourth collection
of stories. In 1964 she published a book for children.
During
the late 1950s and '60s Welty balanced travel with work and caring for her motheryears
that bore fruit in the early '70s with the novels Losing Battles and The
Optimist's Daughter, the latter earning her the Pulitzer Prize. The collected
essays, photographs, and memoirs of Welty's last decades were published to high
acclaim, garnering large international audiences.
Eudora
Welty died on July 23, 2001, at the age of 92.
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