Joy Davidman

Poet

Birthday April 18, 1915

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace New York City, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1960, Oxford, England (45 years old)

Nationality United States

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1909

Her parents, Joseph Davidman and Jeanette Spivack (married 1909), arrived in America in the late 19th century.

Davidman grew up in the Bronx with her younger brother, Howard, and with both parents employed, even during the Great Depression.

She was provided with a good education, piano lessons and family vacation trips.

1915

Helen Joy Davidman (18 April 1915 – 13 July 1960) was an American poet and writer.

Helen Joy Davidman was born on 18 April 1915 into a secular middle-class Jewish family in New York City of Polish-Jewish and Ukrainian-Jewish descent.

1935

Often referred to as a child prodigy, she earned a master's degree from Columbia University in English literature at age twenty in 1935.

In 1935, she received a master's degree in English literature from Columbia University in three semesters, while also teaching at Roosevelt High School.

1936

In 1936, after several of Davidman's poems were published in Poetry, editor Harriet Monroe asked her to work for the magazine as reader and editor.

Davidman resigned her teaching position to work full-time in writing and editing.

During the Great Depression, several incidents, including witnessing the suicide of a hungry orphan jumping off a roof at Hunter College, are said to have caused her to question the fairness of capitalism and the American economic system.

1938

For her book of poems, Letter to a Comrade, she won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Competition in 1938 and the Russell Loines Award for Poetry in 1939.

She was the author of several books, including two novels.

She joined the American Communist Party in 1938.

For her collection of poems, Letter to a Comrade, she won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Competition in 1938.

She was chosen by Stephen Vincent Benét, who commended Davidman for her "varied command of forms and a bold power."

1939

In 1939, she won the Russell Loines Award for Poetry for this same book of poems.

Although much of her work during this period reflected her politics as a member of the American Communist Party, this volume of poetry was much more than implied by the title, and contained forty-five poems written in traditional and free verse that were related to serious topics of the time such as the Spanish Civil War, the inequalities of class structure and male-female relationship issues.

Davidman's style in these revealed the influence of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass.

She was employed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1939 for a six-month stay in Hollywood writing movie scripts.

She wrote at least four, but they were not used and she returned to New York City to work for The New Masses, where she wrote a controversial movie column, reviewing Hollywood movies in a manner described as "Merciless in her criticisms."

1940

Her acclaimed first novel, Anya was published in 1940.

1941

Between 1941 and 1943, she was employed as a book reviewer and poetry editor for The New Masses with publications in many of the issues.

1942

While an atheist and after becoming a member of the American Communist Party, she met and married her first husband and father of her two sons, William Lindsay Gresham, in 1942.

After a troubled marriage, and following her conversion to Christianity, they divorced and she left America to travel to England with her sons.

She married her first husband, author William Lindsay Gresham, on 24 August 1942 after becoming acquainted with him through their mutual interest in communism.

1944

They had two sons, David Lindsay Gresham (born 27 March 1944) and Douglas Howard Gresham (born 10 November 1945).

Bill Gresham had become disillusioned with the Communist Party while volunteering in Spain during the Spanish Civil War to fight fascism and influenced Davidman to leave the party after the birth of their sons.

1946

During the marriage, Gresham wrote his most famous work Nightmare Alley in 1946, while Davidman did freelance work and cared for the house and children.

1951

Davidman wrote in 1951: "I was a well-brought-up, right-thinking child of materialism... I was an atheist and the daughter of an atheist".

Davidman was a child prodigy, who scored above 150 on IQ testing, with exceptional critical, analytical and musical skills.

She read H. G. Wells's The Outline of History at the age of eight and was able to play a score of Chopin on the piano after having read it once and not looking at it again.

At an early age, she read George MacDonald's children's books and his adult fantasy book, Phantastes.

She wrote about the influence of these stories: "They developed in me a lifelong taste for fantasy, which led me years later to C. S. Lewis, who in turn led me to religion."

A sickly child, suffering from a crooked spine, scarlet fever and anemia throughout her school years, and attending classes with much older classmates, she later referred to herself at this time as being "bookish, over-precocious and arrogant".

After finishing high school at Evander Childs High School at fourteen years old, she read books at home until she entered Hunter College in the Bronx at the age of fifteen, earning a BA degree at nineteen.

1954

Davidman published her best-known work, Smoke on the Mountain: An Interpretation of the Ten Commandments, in 1954 with a preface by C. S. Lewis.

1956

Lewis influenced her work and conversion and became her second husband after her permanent relocation to England in 1956.

1960

She died from metastatic carcinoma involving the bones in 1960.

The relationship that developed between Davidman and Lewis has been featured in a television BBC film, a stage play, and a theatrical film named Shadowlands.

1961

Lewis published A Grief Observed under a pseudonym in 1961, from notebooks he kept after his wife's death revealing his immense grief and a period of questioning God.