Kay Boyle



         




Kay Boyle, born February 19, 1902 in St. Paul, Minnesota, United States – died December 27, 1992 in Mill Valley, California, was an award-winning writer, educator, and political activist.

The granddaughter of a publisher, Kay Boyle grew up in several cities but principally in Cincinnati, Ohio. Her father was a lawyer but her greatest influence came from her mother Katherine Evans, a literary and social activist who believed that the wealthy had an obligation to help the less well off. As such, in later years, Kay Boyle championed integration, civil rights, the ban of nuclear weapons, and America's withdrawal from the Vietnam War.

Kay Boyle was educated at the exclusive Shipley School in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, then studied architecture at the Ohio Mechanics Institute in Cincinnati. Interested in the arts, she studied violin at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music before settling in New York City in 1922 where she found work as an writer/editor with a small magazine. That same year, she met and married a French exchange student, Richard Brault, and moved to France in 1923. This change resulted in her staying in Europe for the better part of the next twenty years. Separated from her husband, from a relationship with magazine editor Ernest Walsh, she had had a daughter but in 1928 she met Laurence Vail, who was then married to Peggy Guggenheim. Separated from their spouses, Boyle and Vail lived together between 1929 until 1932 when, following their divorces the two were married. With Vail, she had three children.

During her years in France, Boyle was associated with several innovative literary magazines and made friends with many of the great writers and artists who had gathered in Montparnasse. Amongst her friends were Harry and Caresse Crosby and Eugene and Maria Jolas. It was in 1929 in Paris that the Crosbys' Black Sun Press published Boyle's first book of fiction titled Short Stories. Along with other notables, Kay Boyle wrote for transition, one of the preeminent literary publications of the day. A poet as well as the author of several novels, her writings often reflected her own lifelong search for true love. For her literary talents, Kay Boyle's short stories earned her two O. Henry Awards.

In 1936 she wrote a novel titled Death of a Man that was an attack on the growing threat of Nazism but at the time, no one in America was listening. After having lived in France, Austria, England, and in Germany after World War II, Boyle returned to the United States. In 1943, following her divorce from Laurence Vail, she had married Baron Joseph von Franckenstein with whom she had two children. At home, they were a victim of early 1950s McCarthyism. Her husband was dismissed by Roy Cohn from his post in the Public Affairs Division of the U.S. State Department. Boyle too lost her position as foreign correspondent to The New Yorker, a post she had held for six years and ended up being blacklisted by most of the major magazines. These events spawned her later activism.

Following her husband's passing in 1962, Boyle accepted a creative writing position on the faculty of San Francisco State College where she remained until 1979. During this period she became heavily involved in political activism. She traveled to Cambodia in 1966 as part of the "Americans Want to Know" fact-seeking mission. She participated in numerous protests, and in 1967 was arrested twice and imprisoned. In her later years, she became an active supporter of Amnesty International and worked for the NAACP.

At the age of 90, after an active and productive life, Kay Boyle died at a California seniors home in 1992.

In all, Kay Boyle published more than forty books, including fourteen novels, eight volumes of poetry, eleven collections of short fiction, three children's books, plus French to English translations and a number of essays. Most of her papers and manuscripts are in the Morris Library at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, Illinois. A comprehensive assessment of Boyle's life and work was published in 1986 titled Kay Boyle, Artist and Activist by Sandra Whipple Spanier.

A member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, in addition to her two O. Henry Awards, she received two Guggenheim Fellowships and was given a lifetime achievement award from the National Endowment for the Arts.

A partial bibliography for Kay Boyle:

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Novels:

Poems:

Short stories:






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