Anna Pavelka |
My Antonia was first published in 1918, and this is the year of its centennial. As I often have done after our return from the annual Cather Conference in Red Cloud, Nebraska, I share some of our experiences on my blog. This year is no exception, especially because it is the centennial year of many people's favorite Cather book.
Those of you familiar with Willa Cather know that many of her characters are based on real people, and the settings for many of her stories are actually Red Cloud, Nebraska given different names. Antonia Shimerda was inspired by a real person named Anna Pavelka, who is pictured at right. Cather's admiration and respect for Anna is obvious from the quote accompanying the photograph, for she describes the character she plans to create from Anna as being "like a rare object in the middle of a table which one may examine from all sides." (Image from display in the Red Cloud Opera House, Cather Foundation.)
I first read My Antonia one summer when I would have been about the same age Antonia was when she arrived in Red Cloud with her family, immigrants from Bohemia. My older brother had read My Antonia in a college class and had brought the book home with him when he retuned for the summer. Willa Cather became one of my favorite authors that summer and remains so today.
I recall that I struggled with the idea that when Jim Burden returned to Red Cloud and visited Antonia at the close of the novel, she was the mother of a large family, "a stalwart, brown woman, flat-chested, her curly brown hair a little grizzled," lacking most of her teeth. I wanted her to be the pretty girl Jim had loved as a boy, but Jim taught me a lesson about beauty. "I know so many women who have kept all the things that she had lost, but whose inner glow has faded. Whatever else was gone, Antonia had not lost the fire of life." As he lay awake that night, sleeping in the haymow with two of Antonia's boys sleeping nearby, Jim realized, "She was a battered woman now, not a lovely girl; but she still had that something which fires the imagination, could still stop one's breath for a moment by a look or gesture that somehow revealed the meaning in common things. ...All the strong things of her heart came out in her body, that had been so tireless in serving generous emotions."
How amazing that this fictional character that had so impressed me when I was such a young girl was so closely based upon a real person.
Willa Cather, born on December 7, 1873 arrived in Webster County, Nebraska in 1883, a ten-year-old from the South adjusting to life on the prairie, just as the fictional Jim Burden arrives in the novel from the South as a ten year old. Most of the Cathers' neighbors are European immigrants, just as Jim Burden's neighbors were. When Cather enrolls in Red Cloud High School in 1884, she meets Annie Sadilek Pavelka, the girl that she transforms into the fictional Antonia. In 1915, while on a visit to her old hometown of Red Cloud, Cather visits her childhood friend, Annie Pavelka, and in 1917 she writes My Antonia.
When I read a fine novel, the characters often come alive for me, and in the case of My Antonia, Cather truly placed her childhood friend, "a rare object," at the heart of her novel for us to appreciate "from all sides."
2 comments:
For the Nora Larabee Memorial Library summer reading program for adults, we have to read books with authors whose last names spell out ROCK. I may use Willa Cather for my "c" book. Thanks for the inspiration.
You make me want to re-read My Antonia! Thank you for the reminder of this wonderful novel.
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