“It’s an interesting story with a great many good things in it, but I’m afraid we’re not quite persuaded by the tour-de-force ending.”
Robert Henderson, letter to Elizabeth McKie, Flannery O’Connor’s literary agent, rejecting “Good Country People” for The New Yorker (April 6, 1955)


The leaves are falling in Connecticut. Mrs. T brought a box of
The good news is that if you like fall foliage, as we both do, there aren’t many places in the world that are prettier than Connecticut come mid-October. In the meantime, and seeing as how yesterday was our eleventh anniversary, we decided to treat ourselves to a mini-vacation, our previous attempt to do so having
Be that as it may, it’s true that Mrs. T and I have just weathered a rough patch, rough enough that my eyes filled with tears as I listened the other night to the lines that Sonya speaks at the end of Uncle Vanya, the Chekhov play that I love best and about which I
Nor is it possible to store up present laughter in preparation for a time when it’s in short supply. Would that it were, but all you can do is take life as it comes, and that’s what Mrs. T and I are going to do this week. Mere days from now, there’ll be gaudy sunbursts of red, yellow, and orange wherever we look, followed as sure as the turning of the earth by bare branches. The leaves are falling and the clock is ticking, and we mean to revel in our good luck while it lasts.
I’ve been too preoccupied of late to mention it here, but Satchmo at the Waldorf opened last week at New Orleans’ Le Petit Theatre in a brand-new production directed by Maxwell Williams and starring Barry Shabaka Henley, who previously appeared in Satchmo at Chicago’s Court Theatre and Palm Beach Dramaworks. I first worked with Shabaka in Chicago and directed him in Palm Beach, and on both occasions I was dazzled and delighted by his performance of the demanding triple role of Louis Armstrong, Joe Glaser, and Miles Davis.