Difference between revisions of "Bio:Esther Carlson"

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(Included info connecting our listings with the book the main bio here is most known for.)
(With Dirk Broer's agreement, deleted most of the incorrect information about her.)
 
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Esther (Essie) Carlson graduated from Marshalltown High School in 1938, where she had worked on the newspaper, been a member of "Quill and Scroll" and the "Press Convention", and been an officer of the Nature Club. She attended Grinnell College, where she was a member of the yearbook editorial staff and also the Press Club. She later attended the Univ. of Wisconsin (dates unknown). In the early 1940s, she followed childhood friend, and author, Merle Miller to New York City, where she "embraced a Bohemian existence", including reading poetry in Greenwich Village, while paying the rent as a freelance copywriter. In 1945, she wrote scripts for the Kate Smith radio show, which she described as "tripe of the sheerest sort."  
 
Esther (Essie) Carlson graduated from Marshalltown High School in 1938, where she had worked on the newspaper, been a member of "Quill and Scroll" and the "Press Convention", and been an officer of the Nature Club. She attended Grinnell College, where she was a member of the yearbook editorial staff and also the Press Club. She later attended the Univ. of Wisconsin (dates unknown). In the early 1940s, she followed childhood friend, and author, Merle Miller to New York City, where she "embraced a Bohemian existence", including reading poetry in Greenwich Village, while paying the rent as a freelance copywriter. In 1945, she wrote scripts for the Kate Smith radio show, which she described as "tripe of the sheerest sort."  
  
In New York, James Baldwin slept on her couch and Richard Wright was so enchanted by her writing that he arranged for her to meet other prominent writers at a summer workshop in Vermont. There she authored the 1949 novel "Moon Over the Back Fence," a whimsical tale of a girl on summer vacation who makes an imaginary friend. (Note: This might be an inaccurate description of the Middlebury College "Bread Loaf Writers' Conference", CT, that she attended in 1946.) Her 1947 short story "Museum Piece" is included, in a modified form (e.g., different ending), in "Moon Over the Back Fence".
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In New York, James Baldwin slept on Essie's couch, and Richard Wright was so enchanted by her writing that he arranged for her to meet other prominent writers at a summer workshop in Vermont. There she authored the 1949 novel "Moon Over the Back Fence," a whimsical tale of a girl on summer vacation who makes an imaginary friend. (Note: This might be an inaccurate description referring to the Middlebury College "Bread Loaf Writers' Conference", CT, that she attended in 1946.) Her 1947 short story "Museum Piece" is included, in a modified form (e.g., different ending), in "Moon Over the Back Fence".
  
She married Robert (Bob) Bolster, probably in the late 1940s, but continued to write as Esther Carlson. Esther and Bob are reported to have been living in Brooklyn in 1948, in Rochester in 1949, and at 145 Portland Road in Highlands, NJ about 1950. In the 1950s, Esther taught 6th grade at Highlands Elementary and also worked for the ad agency Young & Rubicam in New York. In Highlands she served as secretary (and briefly president) of the Twin Lights Historical Society in Highlands NJ, and was chairwoman of the Twin Lights Commission, which oversaw the handoff of the Twin Lights Lighthouse from the federal government to the state in 1962. She also founded the American Littoral Society's quarterly Underwater Naturalist in 1962.
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Essie married Robert (Bob) Bolster, probably in the late 1940s, but continued to write as Esther Carlson. Esther and Bob are reported to have been living in Brooklyn in 1948, in Rochester in 1949, and at 145 Portland Road in Highlands, NJ about 1950. In the 1950s, Esther taught 6th grade at Highlands Elementary and also worked for the ad agency Young & Rubicam in New York. In Highlands she served as secretary (and briefly president) of the Twin Lights Historical Society in Highlands NJ, and was chairwoman of the Twin Lights Commission, which oversaw the handoff of the Twin Lights Lighthouse from the federal government to the state in 1962. She also founded the American Littoral Society's quarterly <i>Underwater Naturalist</i> in 1962.
  
 
(Sources: The Facebook page and the Iowa library reference linked on Carlson's Summary Bibliography page. The FictionMags entry for her.)
 
(Sources: The Facebook page and the Iowa library reference linked on Carlson's Summary Bibliography page. The FictionMags entry for her.)
  
The following comments, if they are correct, would have to mean that there are two different authors using the name "Esther Carlson". The data and the links on the Summary Bibliography page apply to the person above, and cannot apply to the purported Joanna Collier who may have used "Esther Carlson" as a pseudonym. While several sources say that the "Esther Carlson" described above "wrote several short stories" before the novel "Moon Over the Back Fence", we have not seen any conclusive evidence that the person above wrote the stories we have listed here for "Esther Carlson".
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Some sources, based on listings in "Partners in Wonder" and "Fantasy & Science Fiction", include suggestions that "Esther Carlson" may be an alias for another author. But the family of the late Carlson has confirmed to us that this is her birth name, and the works we list by her are, in fact, by her. Much of the bio above is extracted from details from her extended family. [[User:Chavey|Chavey]] 03:17, 24 April 2022 (EDT)
 
 
According to "FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION" this might be a pseudonym for Joanna Collier wife of author John Collier. [[User:Lorenzr|Ray]] 11:06, 6 Mar 2008 (CST)<br>
 
This -Esther Carlson being a pseudonym of Joanna Collier- gets supported [http://sffrd.library.tamu.edu/browse/72924/ here], [http://books.google.nl/books?id=ZoNDebTvUnsC&pg=PR5&lpg=PR5&dq=Joanna+Collier+/+Esther+Carlson&source=bl&ots=glFpoKr1Ey&sig=YAIiCOYYDm3hLM0T2M08PiP5kJA&hl=nl&sa=X&ei=Pqa8ULfnJMbJ0QX-ioHwBg&ved=0CDYQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=Joanna%20Collier%20%2F%20Esther%20Carlson&f=false here]. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Collier_(writer) Wikipedia] however mentions about the author John Collier: "He was married to early silent film actress '''Shirley Palmer''' in 1936; they were divorced. His second marriage in 1945 was to New York actress '''Beth Kay (Margaret Elizabeth Eke)'''. They divorced a decade later. His third wife was '''Harriet Hess Collier''', who survived him; they had one son, John G. S. Collier, born in Nice, France, on May 18, 1958.", making no mentioning of a Joanna (at least not for the John Collier in Wikipedia). --[[User:Dirk P Broer|Dirk P Broer]] 13:25, 3 December 2012 (UTC)
 

Latest revision as of 03:17, 24 April 2022

This is an ISFDB biography page for Esther Carlson. It is intended to contain a relatively brief, neutrally-written, biographical sketch of Esther Carlson. Bibliographic comments and notes about the work of Esther Carlson should be placed on Author:Esther Carlson.

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Esther (Essie) Carlson graduated from Marshalltown High School in 1938, where she had worked on the newspaper, been a member of "Quill and Scroll" and the "Press Convention", and been an officer of the Nature Club. She attended Grinnell College, where she was a member of the yearbook editorial staff and also the Press Club. She later attended the Univ. of Wisconsin (dates unknown). In the early 1940s, she followed childhood friend, and author, Merle Miller to New York City, where she "embraced a Bohemian existence", including reading poetry in Greenwich Village, while paying the rent as a freelance copywriter. In 1945, she wrote scripts for the Kate Smith radio show, which she described as "tripe of the sheerest sort."

In New York, James Baldwin slept on Essie's couch, and Richard Wright was so enchanted by her writing that he arranged for her to meet other prominent writers at a summer workshop in Vermont. There she authored the 1949 novel "Moon Over the Back Fence," a whimsical tale of a girl on summer vacation who makes an imaginary friend. (Note: This might be an inaccurate description referring to the Middlebury College "Bread Loaf Writers' Conference", CT, that she attended in 1946.) Her 1947 short story "Museum Piece" is included, in a modified form (e.g., different ending), in "Moon Over the Back Fence".

Essie married Robert (Bob) Bolster, probably in the late 1940s, but continued to write as Esther Carlson. Esther and Bob are reported to have been living in Brooklyn in 1948, in Rochester in 1949, and at 145 Portland Road in Highlands, NJ about 1950. In the 1950s, Esther taught 6th grade at Highlands Elementary and also worked for the ad agency Young & Rubicam in New York. In Highlands she served as secretary (and briefly president) of the Twin Lights Historical Society in Highlands NJ, and was chairwoman of the Twin Lights Commission, which oversaw the handoff of the Twin Lights Lighthouse from the federal government to the state in 1962. She also founded the American Littoral Society's quarterly Underwater Naturalist in 1962.

(Sources: The Facebook page and the Iowa library reference linked on Carlson's Summary Bibliography page. The FictionMags entry for her.)

Some sources, based on listings in "Partners in Wonder" and "Fantasy & Science Fiction", include suggestions that "Esther Carlson" may be an alias for another author. But the family of the late Carlson has confirmed to us that this is her birth name, and the works we list by her are, in fact, by her. Much of the bio above is extracted from details from her extended family. Chavey 03:17, 24 April 2022 (EDT)