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Nancy Milford (1938–2022)

Author of Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay

2+ Works 3,178 Members 46 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Nancy Milford's "Zelda" was translated into twelve languages, sold over 1.4 million copies in five editions, and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, and the National Book Award. She lives in New York and will be teaching at Princeton University in the fall. (Bowker Author Biography)
Disambiguation Notice:

Sometimes confused with Nancy Mitford. Be careful not to combine the two.
Also, despite the fact that Ms. Milford wrote a book about Zelda Fitzgerald, she isn't Zelda Fitzgerald, who has her very own author page. Do not combine them. Thank you for your help.

Image credit: Nancy Milford

Works by Nancy Milford

Zelda: A Biography (1970) 1,396 copies, 21 reviews

Associated Works

The Selected Poetry of Edna St. Vincent Millay (Modern Library Classics) (2001) — Editor, some editions — 348 copies, 9 reviews
Adrienne Rich's Poetry [Norton Critical Edition] (1975) — Contributor — 130 copies, 1 review
Christopher Wilmarth: Light and Gravity (2004) — Contributor — 16 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Winston, Nancy Lee (birth)
Birthdate
1938-03-26
Date of death
2022-03-29
Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Dearborn, Michigan, USA
Places of residence
New York, New York, USA
Education
University of Michigan (B.A.)
Columbia University (MA | PhD)
Occupations
professor
Biographer
Organizations
Leon Levy Center for Biography, Graduate Center, CUNY (executive director)
Disambiguation notice
Sometimes confused with Nancy Mitford. Be careful not to combine the two.
Also, despite the fact that Ms. Milford wrote a book about Zelda Fitzgerald, she isn't Zelda Fitzgerald, who has her very own author page. Do not combine them. Thank you for your help.

Members

Reviews

46 reviews
“My candle burns at both ends

It will not last the night

But ah my foes and oh my friends

It gives a lovely light!”


Savage Beauty is biographer Nancy Milford’s second book about a Jazz Age heroine. There are similarities between her subjects - Zelda Fitzgerald (subject of the earlier volume, Zelda) and Edna St. Vincent Millay (subject of this one) both had seeming urges toward tragic self-destruction. They both had problematical marriages – but the problems were seemingly opposite; Zelda show more lived in the shadow of her husband’s success but Scott was afraid of hers (he tried to stop publication of her book, Save Me The Waltz, on the grounds that it would hinder sales of his Tender Is The Night); Millay, on the other hand, had a husband (Eugene Boissevain) who treated her like a princess – tolerating her extramarital affairs, managing their household – but also enabling her alcoholism and morphine addiction.


There are fairy-tale aspects to Millay’s life – but it’s the original dark Grimm Brothers, not the Disney versions. She was the oldest of three daughters from a hardscrabble family in Maine. Her mom, Cora, threw her father, Henry, out of the house in 1900, when Edna was eight (she always signed her letters “Edna”, but close friends and family called her “Vincent”) and the family lived in genteel poverty. Edna sent some poems to St. Nicholas magazine and won some prizes. Her poetry eventually attracted the attention of a fairy godmother, Caroline Dow, a wealthy spinster who sponsored her (and later her sister Kathleen) at Vassar. At Vassar, Millay seems to have undergone a personality transplant; you might expect a girl from an impoverished family with inadequate formal education (Millay had to spend a year in a preparatory school, also financed by Miss Dow, to meet the Vassar entrance requirements) to be overwhelmed by the wealth of her classmates and the intellectual atmosphere. Instead Millay blossomed, writing more brilliant poetry; getting rave reviews as an actress in school plays; having Lesbian relationships with several students (maybe – more below); avoiding cliques and remaining popular with all her classmates; and violating school rules with abandon. She was suspended just before graduation – for spending a night off campus – but a petition signed by half her graduating class persuaded the faculty to reinstate her so she could receive her diploma.


After graduation she moved to New York and supported herself – barely – by poetry, acting, and magazine articles. She had a series of lovers and at least one abortion. In 1921 she moved to Paris and continued to write and love (she had a miscarriage that year; the father is unknown); in 1923 she married Boissevain.


Her relationship with her husband, as documented by Milford, was pretty strange. Boissevain was a junior son of a wealthy Dutch banking family and twelve years her elder. Contemporary interviews and articles always described Millay as “childlike”, “fragile”, and/or “a girl poet” (she was 5’1” tall and usually weighed under 100 pounds). This apparently appealed to Boissevain and (when she allowed it) he would treat her as a child – telling her when it was time to go to bed, cooking her meals, and screening her from outside contact. However, her behavior was anything but childlike; she went through a series of lovers (including a year spent away from Boissevain, in Paris, with poet George Dillon, 14 years her junior at the time). Boissevain sent a series of increasingly desperate and strange letters – including requests for her used lingerie – and she finally returned to the US in 1925 when the couple bought a farm (“Steepletop”) in upstate New York and an island off the coast of Maine.


Millay continued to write outstanding poetry (plus some plays and the libretto for an opera) while her health deteriorated. In 1936, the passenger door in their car popped open on a curve and Millay was thrown out and down an embankment; she injured her arm and began taking morphine for the pain. From time to time she kept diaries documenting her drug and alcohol use; an entry for December 31, 1940 has 3/8 grain of morphine (a grain is 64 milligrams) at 7:40 am; a cigarette at 7:45; a bottle of beer at 8:15; a cigarette at 8:45; a cigarette at 9:00; a gin rickey and a cigarette at 9:30; another gin rickey at 11:15; a martini and four cigarettes at 12:15; and a ¼ grain of morphine and a cigarette at 12:45. The record does not continue for that day, but by 1943 she was recording an average of 195 mg of morphine a day, plus codeine, plus Nembutal, plus Benzadrine. Boissevain also began taking morphine – not because he was in any pain, but so he could share Millay’s addiction and see how she felt. Millay began checking into hospitals to try and break her addiction, with varying success. Hospital reports describe her as a bad patient, almost continuously in pain and insisting on various painkillers. Rather astonishingly, her doctors usually allowed her a bottle of wine a day; a nurse reported finding a dozen bottles in her hospital room closet – apparently brought in by visitors and stashed away. Boissevain became increasingly “protective” – intercepting incoming letters and disconnecting the telephone at Steepletop. Edna’s younger sister Kathleen became obstreperous, making increasing demands for money. Kathleen had published some poetry and novels herself, but now began claiming that she had written or at least inspired Edna’s poems. Edna responded with money when the letters got through to her but she had to depend on advances from her publisher to provide it. Kathleen collapsed on a New York street in 1943 and died without regaining consciousness; the cause of death was listed as “acute alcoholism”.


In 1949, Boissevain was hospitalized for lung cancer. He survived an operation for removal of a lung but died of a cerebral hemorrhage later that day. Perhaps significantly, Edna seems to have turned herself around after her husband’s death; visitors reported her looking healthy and her handwriting became neat again, unlike the almost illegible scrawl during her addiction years. In 1950, a little more than a year after her husband’s death, the handyman at Steepletop found her lying at the foot of the stairs, with a broken neck.


Savage Beauty is a fine read, but a little strange in spots. Milford sometimes seems to be straining too hard to illuminate some aspect of Millay’s life. The general form of the book is a narrative with interspersed anecdotes from Millay’s friends, family, and acquaintances; selections from letters to and from her and Boissevain; and poetry. Milford introduces the biography by describing her encounter with Norma Millay, the middle Millay sister and resident at Steepletop after Edna’s death. Milford had to do a considerable amount of persuasion to get Norma to allow her access to Edna’s papers, and Norma continues in the background throughout the narrative, periodically interrupting or commenting, as if she was listening to Milford read the biography to her. The strange thing here is Norma Millay died in 1986, while Savage Beauty wasn’t published until 2001; thus the portrayed immediacy of Norma’s presence is fictional.


Other anecdotes in the book also have a forced feel; Edna’s bisexuality is taken as a given, but the evidence for it seems to be some letters Edna wrote from Vassar, where she reports that some girls came into her room and “unhooked” her; comments from acquaintances from Millay’s Paris days, many years after the fact, and a strange anecdote where an unnamed woman who was hosting Millay and Boissevain for a poetry reading describes Millay coming into her room at that night, dropping her evening gown, and inviting her to make love. Possibly relevant is one of the Norma Millay anecdotes; when the sisters were living together in New York in the Edna apparently picked up a young man, brought him back to their apartment, and lost her virginity. She then went to Norma’s room and told her that there was a little knob of flesh between her legs that she should play with because it was pleasurable. I confess I’m certainly not an expert on the details of lesbian sex, but I imagine that if Edna had had sex with other woman in college she would probably already know where and what her clitoris was. Could be, I suppose.


Some of the things that aren’t said or investigated also seem significant. For one thing, Milford never documents how Millay and Boissevain obtained the prodigious quantities of morphine they used. Milford mentions some of Millay’s doctors from the period but never explicitly accuses any of being a pusher; perhaps the information just isn’t attainable but I would have liked to see some sort of comment to the effect that Milford tried to find medical people who knew the details but just couldn’t come up with any. Finally the matter of Millay’s death is left hanging. I can’t tell from Milford’s description whether Millay’s bedroom was upstairs or downstairs at Steepletop. It seems like it was upstairs; Milford describes her as going upstairs in dressing gown and slippers but for some reason not going to bed and returning to the head of the stairs. Then “she pitched wildly forward, falling, hurtling down the full length of the stairs to the landing”. This almost sounds like Milford is suggesting a suicide; but the coroner’s report on Millays death – as documented by Wikipedia but not mentioned by Milford – says Millay had a heart attack.


Still, though, a good read about a fascinating woman. I don’t know whether you should read Millay’s poetry before or after her biography; it’s really good in any case. This one always makes my hair stand on end and brings tears:


Dirge Without Music

I am not resigned to the shutting away of loving hearts in the hard ground.

So it is, and so it will be, for so it has been, time out of mind:

Into the darkness they go, the wise and the lovely. Crowned

With lilies and with laurel they go; but I am not resigned.


Lovers and thinkers, into the earth with you.

Be one with the dull, the indiscriminate dust.

A fragment of what you felt, of what you knew,

A formula, a phrase remains,—but the best is lost.


The answers quick and keen, the honest look, the laughter, the love,—
They are gone. They are gone to feed the roses. Elegant and curled

Is the blossom. Fragrant is the blossom. I know. But I do not approve.

More precious was the light in your eyes than all the roses in the world.


Down, down, down into the darkness of the grave

Gently they go, the beautiful, the tender, the kind;

Quietly they go, the intelligent, the witty, the brave.

I know. But I do not approve. And I am not resigned.
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It's hard to review "Zelda" without tying in my feelings about Zelda and Scott Fitzgerald and their crazy, codependent relationship. But I can't find any fault in Nancy Milford's work, and for such a long biography to hold my interest all the way through is sort of amazing, so I'm giving it five stars.

I first learned about Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald a few years ago when I tried to read a couple of Scott Fitzgerald's books. I couldn't STAND the main characters in any of the books, and reading show more that they were semi-based on the Fitzgeralds in real life made me think these must be some of the most horrid people ever. I read asides about how rocky their relationship was but didn't know too much, but was a little interested in how the characters in the fictional worlds Scott created contrasted with the real people a lot of people compared them to. It wasn't really enough of an interest to do any footwork until I read Hemingway's "A Moveable Feast" and read about his encounters with the Fitzgeralds. They sounded interesting and it spurred me to read "Zelda," which had been sitting on my bookshelf for about a year.

So I guess I should get to the actual review, sorry. Milford writes about Zelda's childhood briefly, but most of the book focuses on her life after she meets Scott, which has a lot to do with the fact that the latter part of her life is better documented, I'm sure. Milford is a skillful biographer and has a knack as far as keeping the reader interested in the story she's telling. This is not quite a biography of Scott, but it is hard not to tell his story while telling Zelda's, so you learn quite a bit about Scott along the way.

Zelda's story is so sad, at least I thought it was. She is not a sympathetic character all of the time -- sometimes she is downright unlikeable -- but I couldn't help but feel sorry for her as her husband stole pieces wholesale from her life to use in his writing, including writing from her journals and letters, and blamed her for almost everything bad that happened to him, professionally and sometimes personally. It seemed at times that he even blamed her for her own mental illness. Reading about Zelda's ups-and-downs and visits to mental health facilities was as sad as reading about her plaintive letters to Scott after their relationship fizzled for the last time, and her problems connecting with her daughter, Scottie.

"Zelda" is just a SAD book, so I can see why it wouldn't be for everybody. It does give great insight into the life of the couple behind the books I read, though (and surprise! I think I would dislike them as much in real life, in their heyday, as I did the characters in the books), and it gives a little window into how mental illness was handled seventy years ago or so. It's a fascinating look into a complicated life, if you can get past the melancholy inevitable end.

[BONUS! I have now learned I am crap at reviewing biographies. Yay?]
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The author seems to have tip-toed through a minefield without losing any major body parts. Millay burnt her candle at both ends, for sure! There was enough of her poetry here to keep the story grounded. Plus lots of letters. I don't know this whole world at all so whether the books is fair or complete, I can't judge based on any outside knowledge. The book coheres internally. It does a good job of presenting all sorts of wild facts without being judgmental.
http://tinyurl.com/y6r6qs35

I expect my book club is going to hate this book.

There are several reasons for this, but chief among them is its length. I understand that it's difficult to write a biography of a celebrity without including everything about their life - and especially if it's an author so you want to include samples of their writing - but this book just drags on forever. It's a fascinating life at a fascinating time in US history, but Milford makes odd choices at times on what she show more includes and what she doesn't include.

She doesn't explain a lot about Millay's life. Meaning, she details and describes it, but doesn't provide context and milieu except when absolutely necessary. At times, that leaves us adrift (such as when Millay struggles with an illness, we're expected to understand the context with very few clues as to what it was).

However, it is fair to say that what Milford is trying to do here is to write a biography that Millay herself would appreciate - in her style and with her panache. Millay was an outstandingly excellent writer and this shows in every poem and every letter showcased in this book. She was also damn snarky, pushed the feminist and anti-war agendas hard, and lived a pretty wild life. I understand why Milford is trying to match that, but it doesn't always work - it leaves us adrift again.

I admit that I was a bit depressed to read about her struggles in the 1920s-1940s to get her work appreciated as a poet, not as a woman poetess. She struggles with some of the same things we still struggle with today, and it's utterly frustrating that the needle is still moving imperceptibly.

On a happier note, I will definitely be using Scramoodle and Skiddlepins in my conversations with my hubby from now on!
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Rating
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