John Cheever - (1912-1982) |
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Londonderry High School in Londonderry, New Hampshire I. Biography On May 27, 1912 in Quincy, Massachusetts, John Cheever was born to Frederick and Mary Cheever. John Cheever was very close to older brother Frederick when
they were young. John Cheever attended Thayer Academy in Milton, Massachusetts as a teenager until he was expelled at age seventeen for smoking and bad grades.
After his expulsion, John Cheever moved in with his brother, Frederick, who was seven years his senior. In the 1930's, the two brothers moved to Boston, Massachusetts. While
in Boston, John Cheever met Hazel Hawthorne, the wife of a famous biographer. She helped him with his writing and provided him with jobs, even after he moved to New York.
In New York, John Cheever met Malcolm Cowley, the editor of the New Republic. Cowley encouraged Cheever to attend Yaddo Writers' Colony in Saratoga Springs, which was run
by Elizabeth Ames. Cheever left Yaddo after a month because Ames thought he was spending too much time at the local racetrack. He did return many times after that, though, to work as a handyman.
On March 22, 1941, John Cheever married Mary Winternitz, an instructor of literature at Briarcliff College. From 1941 until 1945, Cheever served in the military, fighting in World
War II. He moved to Scarborough, New York in 1950 and taught advanced literary composition at Barnard College in 1955. He and his family spent a year in Italy before
permanently moving to Ossining, New York. Cheever, his wife, and his three children, Susan, Ben, and Frederico spent most of their summers at Newfound Lake, New Hampshire.
When John Cheever was sixty, he suffered a massive heart attack and spent many weeks of recovery in the Memorial Hospital in Tarrytown, NY. In 1975, Cheever checked himself into
Smithers, an alcoholic rehabilitation center in New York City, for one month. John Cheever died on June 18, 1982 in Ossining, New York. II. Professional Life
John Cheever's first story to be published was entitled "Expelled," which was about his experience of being expelled from Thayer Academy. It was published in the New Republic
October 1, 1930. He signed the story "Jon Cheever". When Cheever was living in Boston, he was working for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. He would read books and then write synopses of those that were possible
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer screenplays. At the age of twenty-two, Cheever had a story published for the first time in The New Yorker, "Brooklyn Rooming House." The New Yorker
then went on to publish one hundred and twenty of Cheever's stories. In 1951, John Cheever began to receive numerous awards. He was made a Guggenheim fellow. "The Five-Forty-Eight
," won the Benjamin Franklin magazine award in 1955 and "The Country Husband" won the O. Henry Award in 1956. He was elected to the National
Institute of Arts and Letters in 1957 and then elevated to American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1973. "The Wapshot Chronicle" won the National Book Award in 1957 and "The Wapshot Scandal"
received the American Academy of Arts and Letters Howells Medal in 1965. In 1964, Time magazine put forth a cover story on Cheever's life and writings. III. Works by John Cheever
"O City of Broken Dreams." The New Yorker (January 24, 1948) IV. John Cheever on the Web V. Bibliography "Biography." John Cheever. 1999. Bedford/St. Martins. Online. Internet. Coale, Samuel. John Cheever. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 1977.
"The Stories of John Cheever." CyberSpace Spinner. 2000. Online. Internet.
This essay was submitted by a student of Elizabeth H. Juster, a teacher at Londonderry High School in Londonderry, New Hampshire. |
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