Annie Dillard

Author

Birthday April 30, 1945

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.

Age 78 years old

Nationality United States

#30473 Most Popular

1945

Annie Dillard (née Doak; born April 30, 1945) is an American author, best known for her narrative prose in both fiction and non-fiction.

She has published works of poetry, essays, prose, and literary criticism, as well as two novels and one memoir.

Dillard was born April 30, 1945, in Pittsburgh to Frank and Pam Doak.

She is the eldest of three daughters.

1967

She received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1967 and a Master of Arts degree in 1968.

Her Master's thesis on Henry David Thoreau showed how Walden Pond functioned as "the central image and focal point for Thoreau's narrative movement between heaven and earth."

Dillard spent the first few years after graduation oil painting, writing, and keeping a journal.

Several of her poems and short stories were published, and during this time she also worked for Lyndon B. Johnson's Anti-Poverty Program.

1974

Her 1974 novel Pilgrim at Tinker Creek won the 1975 Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction.

In her first book of poems, Tickets for a Prayer Wheel (1974), Dillard first articulated themes that she would later explore in other works of prose.

Dillard's journals served as a source for Pilgrim at Tinker Creek (1974), a nonfiction narrative about the natural world near her home in Roanoke, Virginia.

Although the book contains named chapters, it is not (as some critics assumed) a collection of essays.

Early chapters were published in The Atlantic, Harpers, and Sports Illustrated. The book describes God by studying creation, leading one critic to call her "one of the foremost horror writers of the 20th Century."

In The New York Times, Eudora Welty said the work was "admirable writing" that reveals "a sense of wonder so fearless and unbridled... [an] intensity of experience that she seems to live in order to declare," but "I honestly don't know what [Dillard] is talking about at... times."

1975

From 1975 to 1978, Dillard was a scholar-in-residence at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Washington.

Dillard has since received honorary doctorate degrees from Boston College, Connecticut College, and the University of Hartford.

Dillard's works have been compared to those by Virginia Woolf, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Emily Dickinson, William Blake, and John Donne, and she cites Henry James, Thomas Hardy, Graham Greene, George Eliot, and Ernest Hemingway among her favorite authors.

The book won the 1975 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction.

Dillard was 28, making her the youngest woman to have won the award.

One day, Dillard decided to begin a project in which she would write about whatever happened on Lummi Island within a three-day time period.

When a plane crashed on the second day, Dillard began to contemplate the problem of pain and God's allowance of "natural evil to happen."

1977

Although Holy the Firm (1977) was only 66 pages long, it took her 14 months, writing full-time, to complete the manuscript.

In The New York Times Book Review novelist Frederick Buechner called it "a rare and precious book."

Some critics wondered whether Dillard was under the influence of hallucinogenic drugs while writing the book.

Dillard replied that she was not.

1980

From 1980, Dillard taught for 21 years in the English department of Wesleyan University, in Middletown, Connecticut.

1982

Teaching a Stone to Talk (1982) is a book of 14 short nonfiction narrative and travel essays.

1987

Early childhood details can be drawn from Annie Dillard's autobiography, An American Childhood (1987), about growing up in the 1950s Point Breeze neighborhood of Pittsburgh in "a house full of comedians."

The book focuses on "waking up" from a self-absorbed childhood and becoming immersed in the present moment of the larger world.

She describes her mother as an energetic non-conformist.

Her father taught her many useful subjects such as plumbing, economics, and the intricacies of the novel On the Road, though by the end of her adolescence she began to realize neither of her parents is infallible.

In her autobiography, Dillard describes reading a wide variety of subjects including geology, natural history, entomology, epidemiology, and poetry, among others.

Among the influential books from her youth were The Natural Way to Draw and Field Book of Ponds and Streams because they allowed her a way to interact with the present moment and a way of escape, respectively.

Her days were filled with exploring, piano and dance classes, rock collecting, bug collecting, drawing, and reading books from the public library including natural history and military history such as that of World War II.

As a child, Dillard attended the Shadyside Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh, though her parents did not attend. She spent four summers at the First Presbyterian Church (FPC) Camp in Ligonier, Pennsylvania.

As an adolescent, she stopped attending church, citing "hypocrisy."

When she told her minister of her decision, she was given four volumes of C. S. Lewis's broadcast talks, from which she appreciated that author's philosophy on suffering, but elsewhere found the topic inadequately addressed.

She attended Pittsburgh Public Schools until fifth grade, and then The Ellis School until college.

Dillard attended Hollins College in Roanoke, Virginia, where she studied English, theology, and creative writing.

Dillard stated, "In college I learned how to learn from other people. As far as I was concerned, writing in college didn't consist of what little Annie had to say, but what Wallace Stevens had to say. I didn't come to college to think my own thoughts, I came to learn what had been thought."