Template:Short description Template:Infobox writer Virginia Hamilton Adair (February 28, 1913, New York City – September 16, 2004, Claremont, California) was an American poet who became famous later in life with the 1996 publication of Ants on the Melon.

BackgroundEdit

Mary Virginia Hamilton was born in the Bronx and raised in Montclair, New Jersey.<ref name=":0">"Adair, Virginia Hamilton (1913–2004)." Dictionary of Women Worldwide: 25,000 Women Through the Ages, edited by Anne Commire and Deborah Klezmer, vol. 1, Yorkin Publications, 2007, p. 7. Gale eBooks. Accessed 14 Sept. 2021.</ref> She attended Montclair Kimberley Academy, graduating in the class of 1929.<ref>Alumni Awards, Montclair Kimberley Academy. Accessed March 6, 2011.</ref> She disliked the name "Mary" and dropped it as a young adult. Adair composed her first poem at the age of two; after that, she wrote over a thousand poems.<ref name="foun">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Exposed to poetry as a young child through her father, she began writing her own poems regularly at age six.<ref>Fox, Margalit. "Virginia Hamilton Adair, 91, a Poet Famous Late in Life, Dies", The New York Times, September 18, 2004. Accessed November 21, 2007.</ref> More than seventy were published in journals and major magazines, such as the Atlantic and the New Yorker.<ref name="foun" />

She received her B.A. in English from Mount Holyoke College in 1933 and her M.A. from Radcliffe College. Later she was professor emerita at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, in Pomona, California, where she taught from 1957 to 1980.<ref name="Cal Poly Pomona Collection">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

CareerEdit

Though she published work during the 1930s and 1940s in Saturday Review, The Atlantic, and The New Republic, Adair did not publish again for almost 50 years. There were several factors which preoccupied her over those decades and took her attention away from publishing her own work. These included her 1936 marriage to prominent historian Douglass Adair,<ref name=":0" /> motherhood (she had three children),<ref name=":0" /> and an academic career. She was also soured on publishing her work due to her distaste for the gamesmanship of the publishing world.

Adair's return to publishing came in the 1990s, following her husband's 1968 suicide,<ref name=":0" /> her retirement from teaching, and her loss of sight from glaucoma. Adair's friend and fellow poet Robert Mezey forwarded some of her work to Alice Quinn, The New Yorker's poetry editor. The New Yorker published the work in 1995, and the subsequently published "Ants on the Melon". Adair's work then appeared regularly in The New Yorker and The New York Review of Books.

WorksEdit

  • Beliefs and Blasphemies
  • Ants on the Melon<ref name=":0" />

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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