| Clara
Rising 1923-2010
Major
Works
- In the Season of the Wild Rose
(1986)
- Greek Fire, A Novel of Ancient Greece
(2002)
- The Tar Babies (2003)
- Sing One Song (2003)
- The Birth and Death of Athenian Democracy: The
Story of Pericles (2003)
- That Inward Eye, A Collection of Poems
(2005)
- The Taylor File (2007
----------------------------------------
Biography of
Clara Rising
Clara Rising was born in Ocean Springs, Mississippi,
on October 23, 1923, to
Clara Duffy Coates of New Orleans and Frederick Coates of Boliver,
Tennessee. She earned her Ph.D. in English and became professor
of English at Kansas State University and later humanities professor
at the University of Florida. She is the author of seven books.
Her first book, In the Season of the Wild Rose,
is a Civil War novel about John Hunt Morgan, a Kentucky cavalry
general. It was published by Random House in 1986 and chosen
by The History Book Club. Rising is also the mother of four
children, grandmother of six, and the wife of a retired Army
officer. She also is now retired.
The manuscript for her first book In
the Season of the Wild Rose was huge and was taken
by the first publisher to see it--Random House. As she tells
it, she had no agent when she ran across a magazine in the UK
library in Lexington. It was dark and pouring rain, and she
says, "I had picked up a copy of Publisher's
Weekly. Stan (her husband) was scouring
around campus in a VW bug waiting to pick me up. I ran out in
the rain and to my dismay (I have never stolen anything from
a library in my life) the magazine was still in my hand. I opened
it to an article with a title question for publishers: "What
Are You Looking For?" One of the answers was by an
editor from Random House who answered, 'A writer not afraid
of a big story.' I wrote him and said, "Did you mean it?"
Later that fall, I was invited to ride in a fox hunt in New
York State. The horse was an Australian thoroughbred mare--absolutely
great. I tried her in an open field, but when I put her into
the canter she limped. I couldn't ride her over jumps! But I
was in New York. I called Marc Jaffe, the editor . It was October.
I knew most of the editors would be in Hamburg, Germany, for
the yearly gathering. But when I called, Jaffe was in--and invited
me to come down to the city. When I walked into his office,
four editors were there. They liked the title. One, a girl named
Ann Lafarge, even said, 'But AMANDA was real, wasn't she?' I
had to admit that she was the only fictional character in the
book."
According to Clara Rising, there is an interesting
link between the Morgan book (In the Season of the
Wild Rose) and the Zachary Taylor book, The
Taylor File. Bill and Betty Gist, who owned President
Taylor's boyhood home in Louisville, invited her to stay with
them when she was there for a meeting of the Round Table. Rising
states that she mentions this in the Taylor book--the fact that
Betty, who was related to Taylor, said that the family had never
been satisfied by the "gastroenteritis" diagnosis,"
that something sinister might have been involved. Says Rising,
"This actually started my research. Trivial things so often
open doors into vistas never imagined."
Clara Rising had moved back to Mississippi, her
childhood home, just before Hurricane Katrina struck. She and
her husband lost almost everything in the storm, and they now
live in Keystone Heights, Florida.
UPDATE 2010: Clara Rising died
peacefully at her home in Florida on January 14, 2010.
Read
Stephen Enzweiler's Interview below for more information.-------------------------------
Interview
with Clara Rising by Stephen Enzweiler
(Reprinted here with permission)
MISSISSIPPI RISING: Author
Clara Rising’s writings tempt us to consider new insights
about history and our cultural inheritance
Clara Rising looked out the window of her hotel room and smiled.
“Why write?” she asks in response to my question.
“Well,” she begins slowly. “You write to create
a different world, a refuge in a way; you want to get away from
the world as it is and get in touch with yourself, your feelings.
You want to discover the significance of the small things in
life that are normally overlooked and then express that to others.”
For
nearly more than half a century, Mississippi author Clara Rising
has been doing just that. Known principally as an author of
historical fiction, she has maintained an unabashed passion
for producing works that tease the intellect and challenge the
reader to consider new insights about human nature, history,
and America’s cultural inheritance. Her six books are
historical in content, yet packaged with literary conventions
to read like fiction; it is a writing style that was also favored
by Civil War author and historian Shelby Foote.
“I write historical works so others may appreciate where
we are now and where we have been,” she maintains, pointing
out that unless people can connect with their cultural past,
they cannot hope to fully understand themselves, their country,
nor their place in history. “Knowledge and observation
and experience are everything in writing,” she notes.
“But it is feeling that puts all of that into motion and
makes it come alive.”
While writing was the goal, her books actually came later in
life. She had been an academic for years, a PhD who taught Literature
at some of the nation’s most prestigious universities.
It was only after she retired from academia that her ideas on
the importance of cultural inheritance in American society took
shape and became the springboard for writing the books.
It was Clara’s mother who can be credited with first influencing
and setting into motion that desire to learn, to know, and to
write. She was a strong-willed, creative, red-haired Irish girl
from New Orleans who dabbled in short stories and literature
for years, and who started a small poetry magazine in the 1930’s.
By the summer of 1938, Clara’s mother decided she also
wanted to try her hand at writing screenplays. “She heard
that William Faulkner had been in Hollywood and she had the
notion to go talk to him,” says Clara of the times. They
drove from Water Valley to Oxford to meet Faulkner at his Rowan
Oak home. “He was very kind, very gracious, and very friendly,”
Rising remembers of the future Nobel Laureate. “He invited
us to come sit on the porch and have some refreshments. Mother
and I had lemonade, but he drank something much stronger.”
They sat for hours talking freely about each other’s interests,
about writing, about current events. It ended all too soon,
but Clara never forgot the experience.
As a daughter of the South, the influence of history is inescapable.
The other influence that shaped her growing awareness of history
came in 1943, when she met and married a handsome, young Army
infantry officer named Stan Rising and sent him off to war.
She endured it as her husband fought the Nazi’s in the
Ardennes and at Bastogne; he was wounded and received the bronze
star, but he came back to her after it was over. After the war,
she became an Army wife, following Stan from assignment to assignment
for another 17 years until his retirement in 1963. Along the
way, she went to school where she could, managing to finish
a BA in Literature, earn an MA in Creative Writing (from Louisville
University), and finally a Ph.D. in English and Philosophy.
She taught Literature at Kansas State University and humanities
at the University of Florida, where she received her Ph.D.,
before buying and settling on a piece of rough land in the forested
hills east of Lexington, Kentucky.
“The land came with three pre-Civil War cabins dating
back to 1787,” she remembers. Living without electricity
or running water for nearly two years, she and Stan lived a
virtual pioneer existence--rebuilding the cabins, clearing pastures,
running fence, building barns, collecting rain water for drinking,
fending off wild animals.
Her experiences inspired her to write her first full-length
book, In the Season of the Wild Rose
(1986), a full-bodied Civil War novel of love and conflict based
upon Kentucky raider John Hunt Morgan. She published her second
novel, Greek Fire, about Pericles
in 2002, but returned to Kentucky as the setting for her third
book, Sing One Song (2003), a memoir
chronicling her experiences of the hard, rustic life in rural
Kentucky.
Clara
Rising’s most controversial work was The Tar
Babies (2003). It is a work of Orwellian dimension
and depth, written in the simple framework of the old Uncle
Remus story about how Brer Fox lured Brer Rabbit with a tar
baby so he could do him in. The Tar Babies
speaks to the modern socio-cultural obsession with society’s
numb acceptance of inherited commands from religion, media,
and government. It examines why people tend to ignore the human
capacity for independent reason and critical thought, and their
inability to ultimately comprehend truth.
Her latest book, The Taylor File (2007),
is a skillful recreation of President Zachary Taylor’s
life and mysterious death recorded with a historian’s
sharp eye for detail and a novelist’s sensitivity to motives
and possibility. Taylor is thought to have died suddenly in
1850 from acute gastroenteritis. But Rising’s own research
advanced the theory that it was more likely poison--possibly
arsenic--that did him in. It was a conclusion that ultimately
led to the exhumation of Taylor’s remains in 1991. However,
lab findings concluded that arsenic was not involved, and so
his untimely death remains a mystery.
Clara
Rising has maintained an unabashed passion for producing works
that challenge us to consider new insights about history and
the cultural inheritance that defines us as Americans, a perspective
considered by many as essential for survival in the global 21st
century. Now 84, she still writes and rides her horses in the
countryside near her home in Keystone Heights, Florida. Her
books are available through most bookstores and may also be
purchased online at Amazon.com.
----------------------------------------------
About the Author:
Stephen Enzweiler is a journalist, short story writer, and Contributing
Editor to Y’all Magazine. More
about this author at StephenEnzweiler.com, or contact him at
steve@yall.com.
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Related
Websites
The
Tar Babies: Political Correctness on
Media Monitors Network.
Clara
Rising's Chapter from In the Season of the Wild Rose
from The Kentucky Anthology.
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Bibliography
Enzweiler, Stephen. MISSISSIPPI RISING: Author
Clara Rising’s writings tempt us to consider new insights
about history and our cultural inheritance, 2008.
Rising, Clara. Emails to Nancy Jacobs, March, 2009.
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