Mary Craig Sinclair
Mary Craig Kimbrough Sinclair | |
---|---|
Born | Greenwood, Mississippi | February 12, 1882
Died | April 26, 1961 Monrovia, California | (aged 79)
Occupation | Novelist, writer, political activist |
Nationality | American |
Mary Craig Sinclair (1882–1961) was a writer and the wife of Upton Sinclair.
Early life and education
[edit]She was born Mary Craig Kimbrough in Greenwood, Mississippi, on February 12, 1882, the oldest child of Mary Hunter (née Southworth) and Allan McCaskill Kimbrough, a judge.[1] Beginning at age 13, Mary studied at the Mississippi State College for Women (starting with what were essentially high school classes) and graduated from the Gardner School for Young Ladies in New York City in 1900.[1] Her father was a wealthy attorney with banking interests, and a member of one of the oldest elite Mississippi families.
Career
[edit]Kimbrough (called Craig in many accounts) began writing and contributed regularly to newspapers and magazines. On a trip with her mother to a sanitarium in Battle Creek, Michigan, they attended a lecture by Upton Sinclair, who had published The Jungle, where they met him. Kimbrough talked with him about her writing and he began to teach her through their deepening relationship.
At the time of the Kimbrough-Sinclair marriage on April 21, 1913, the New York Times reported that Mary Craig Kimbrough was best known in the South for The Romance History of Winnie Davis, her biography of Winnie Davis, the daughter of Jefferson Davis.[2] But in her autobiography, Craig said she never wanted to publish it because she found that "emotionalism and sentimentality among Confederate veterans made writing an objective study impossible."[1] As she recalled, her future husband said, "Your book is terrible! You can't write. I can't honestly encourage you."[3]
..the best novel Mr. Sinclair has yet written–so much the best that it stands in a class by itself., The New York Times, 25 May 1913
According to Craig, at her insistence Upton Sinclair published Sylvia (1913) under his name. Craig said that she wrote the novel about a Southern girl based on her own experiences.[1] In her 1957 memoir, she described how she and her husband had collaborated on the work:
Upton and I struggled through several chapters of Sylvia together, disagreeing about something on every page. But now and then each of us admitted that the other had improved something. I was learning fast now that this novelist was not much of a psychologist. He thought of characters in a book merely as vehicles for carrying his ideas.[5]
Once married, she said they collaborated on a sequel, Sylvia's Marriage (1914), which was also published under Upton Sinclair's name, by John C. Winston Company, Philadelphia.[6][7]
The writers disagreed about authorship. In his 1962 autobiography, Upton Sinclair wrote: "[Mary] Craig had written some tales of her Southern girlhood; and I had stolen them from her for a novel to be called Sylvia."[8]
Marriage and family
[edit]Kimbrough married Upton Sinclair on April 12, 1913. At the time her friends said she did not share her new husband's "liberal ideas on matrimony." He had once said that marriage is "nothing but legalized slavery...for the average married woman."[2]
Her husband, Upton Sinclair, credited her with helping him to "write and publish three million books and pamphlets, flowing into every country in the world."[9] In his autobiography, he portrayed Mary Sinclair as someone "who may not always have believed in what her husband was doing but cheerfully helped him do it."[10]
Mental telepathy
[edit]Upton Sinclair's Mental Radio (1930) reported that Mary had telepathic powers. He included her testimony describing her technique and her assertion that others could acquire the same ability.[11] Mary attempted to duplicate 290 pictures which were drawn by her brother. Sinclair claimed Mary successfully duplicated 65 of them, with 155 "partial successes" and 70 failures. The book was criticized by science writer Martin Gardner who wrote "As Mental Radio stands, it is a highly unsatisfactory account of conditions surrounding the clairvoyance tests. Throughout his entire life, Sinclair has been a gullible victim of mediums and psychics." The experiment was not done in scientifically controlled conditions and the possibility of sensory leakage had not been ruled out.[12]
Works
[edit]- Sinclair included one of Mary Craig Sinclair's sonnets, "Sisterhood," in his 1915 anthology The Cry for Justice: An Anthology of the Literature of Social Protest.[13]
- Craig Sinclair privately published a collection of her sonnets in the 1920s.[1][14]
- Southern Belle: A Personal Story of a Crusader's Wife (1957). Her autobiography covers her life from her birth into privileged Mississippi society to her married life.[15]
According to one reviewer, Sinclair reports on her early life with "sentimentality...that does no real harm. Indeed, it is rather touching."[16] "Mrs. Sinclair," it said, "has produced a book interesting enough to suggest that she and Upton Sinclair learned from each other and significant enough to be worth attention."[16] Another said her book told "a truly romantic as well as wonderfully goofy story" that would prove "irresistible to students of U.S. life and manners."[17]
Sinclair had become extremely frail by the mid-1950s, and died in Monrovia, California, on April 26, 1961, at the age of 78.[1][18][19]
Honors
[edit]- The poet George Sterling addressed his Sonnets to Craig (1928) to her.[20]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f Peggy W. Prenshaw, "Sinclair, Mary Craig Kimbrough," in James B. Lloyd, ed., Lives of Mississippi Authors, 1817–1967, University of Mississippi Press, 2009, accessed November 9, 2010
- ^ a b Special to the Times, New York Times, April 21, 1913, accessed October 29, 2010
- ^ Southern Belle, p. 77
- ^ Review: "'Sylvia': Mr. Upton Sinclair's Novel upon a Much-Discussed Theme", New York Times, 25 May 1913
- ^ Southern Belle, 106-8, 111–2, 129–32, 142; quote 111-2
- ^ Southern Belle, p. 146
- ^ Upton Sinclair, Sylvia's Marriage, reprint BiblioBazaar, 2007, accessed December 10, 2010
- ^ Prenshaw, 410, quoting Upton Sinclair, The Autobiography of Upton Sinclair, NY: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1962, pp. 180, 195
- ^ Upton Sinclair, "Foreword," Southern Belle, New York: Crown Publishers, (1957), p. vii, accessed September 24, 2010
- ^ "Recollections of a Crusader", New York Times, November 18, 1962, accessed October 29, 2010
- ^ New York Times: "Miscellaneous Books in Brief Review," June 15, 1930, accessed October 29, 2010. A sympathetic report of her experiments appeared in William Seabrook, Witchcraft (NY: Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1940); New York Times: "Mr. Seabrook, Deep in the Realm of Witchcraft," September 15, 1940, accessed October 29, 2010.
- ^ Martin Gardner. Fads & Fallacies in the Name of Science (Courier Dover Publications, 1957) Chapter 25: ESP and PK, available online, accessed July 25, 2010.
- ^ Upton Sinclair, ed., The Cry for Justice, Philadelphia: John C. Winston Co., 1915
- ^ The Sonnets were reprinted in the 1962 memorial re-issue of Southern Belle.
- ^ Mary Craig Sinclair, Southern Belle: A Personal Story of a Crusader's Wife (NY: Crown Publishers, 1957)
- ^ a b R.L. Duffus, "The Goddess and Lanny Budd", New York Times, January 19, 1958, accessed October 29, 2010
- ^ TIME: Books: Uppie's Goddess, November 18, 1957, accessed November 6, 2010
- ^ New York Times: "Upton Sinclair to Wed", October 12, 1961, accessed October 29, 2010
- ^ Matthew Hormann, "Monrovia's Most Notable Socialist", Monrovia Patch, October 20, 2010, accessed November 6, 2010
- ^ George Sterling, Sonnets to Craig (1928)