Oh no!
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Oddly, Wikipedia has her death date listed as 8/31/07, with no citation, and AP/NYT doesn't list anything.
I loved many of her books. If you haven't read the 2004 New Yorker profile of her and you love her books, don't ever read it. Unless you can successfully detach knowing about the writer from enjoying the writing (I can't.)
Okay, now I need to know, flea. Dish. Whitefont if necessary.
Oh!
I just went in to cry to the SO. Madeline L'engle had a huge influence on my life. She significantly altered some of my inherited views and challenged me to think through some others. I am more tolerant today because of her.
When I was a little girl, I used to rush to the library to get her newest book. It was my first experience with reading the works of a living, breathing, creating author.
The mother of one of my friends is a great author herself, and was in a writing group with her. I always intended to write Madeline a thank-you letter and send it through her, but I never did. I regret that.
Madeline L'engle had a huge influence on my life. She significantly altered some of my inherited views and challenged me to think through some others.
Oh, me too! She's one of my top 5 favorite authors.
Man. That breaks my heart.
Nothing terribly shocking or specifically horrifying, ita. Just didn't come across as a nice person, a person who respected her family's privacy, especially. Her children hated her books, and felt she lied in her memoirs. Her son died at 45 or so of alcoholism and she never admitted it. That sort of thing.
I was kind of devastated.
Thanks, flea. Huh. That's very...real. Mundane. You expect both more and less from people who make it into or near the private eye.
I saw her speak at my college. She was tall and sort of like a creaky old dragon. She talked a lot about her faith which surprised me.
But like several others here, her books had a big impact on me.
I remember reading the first three books of the Time Quintet, as they seem to be called now (I didn't even know there were two other books) when I was in elementary school, probably. I liked A Wrinkle in Time but remember almost nothing about it now, but I recall being very confused by the other two books, which seemed to be for an older audience. I don't think I understood how Meg could be pregnant, or what that really meant.
Madeleine L'Engle was a huge influence on my beliefs/ideas, too, and I sort wish I hadn't read the white font. I still read Wrinkle in TIme regularly, and it is just so beautiful and meaningful and real to me that it always brings tears to my eyes, not just from the sad parts, but pretty much from the beginning. And I love Meg.