Sonia Greene

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File:Lovecraft-1924.jpg
Sonia Greene with H. P. Lovecraft

Sonia Haft Greene Davis (16 March 1883 - 26 December 1972) was a one-time pulp fiction writer and amateur publisher, a single mother, business woman and successful milliner who bankrolled several fanzines in the early twentieth century. She is perhaps best known for being president of the Amateur Press Association, and her two-year marriage to American weird fiction writer H. P. Lovecraft.

Biography

Greene was born Sonia Haft Shafirkin in the village Ichnya, 87 miles northeast of Kiev in Ukraine. Her father apparently died when she was a child, and her mother emigrated to the United States, leaving Sonia and her brother in Liverpool. Sonia joined her mother in America in 1892.

At the age of sixteen Sonia married Samuel Seckendorff, who was ten years older than herself. She gave birth to a son in 1900, who died after three months. Her daughter, Florence Carol, was born on 19 March 1902. Seckendorff, a Russian, adopted the surname Greene, and according to Lovecraft's correspondent Alfred Galpin[1] was "a man of brutal character". He died in 1916.

Greene was independently middle class, unusual for women of that time.[2] She worked as a milliner at a department store and traveled frequently for her job.[3] Her salary allowed her to rent a nice house for herself and her daughter in the then-fancy area of Brooklyn known as Flatbush. It also allowed her to donate money to several amateur press publications, as well as to travel to amateur press conventions. She met Lovecraft at one such convention.[4]

After her marriage to Lovecraft ended, Greene moved to the West Coast of the United States. In 1936 she married a Dr Nathaniel Davis of Los Angeles. However, her marriage to Lovecraft was never legally annulled because Lovecraft failed to sign the final decree, so this union was technically bigamous. Greene was informed of this late in life and it disturbed her considerably.[5]

Greene's best-known story is "The Invisible Monster," which was revised and edited by H.P. Lovecraft for publication in Weird Tales (November, 1923)[6][7]. Her daughter Florence became a successful journalist. The two women had a tense relationship, and apparently never spoke again after Greene married Lovecraft. Greene does not mention her daughter in her autobiography.[citation needed]

Works

Poems

  • "To Florence"
  • “Mors Omnibus Comunis (Written in a Hospital)”

Stories

Memoir

  • The Private Life of H.P. Lovecraft (written under the name Sonia H. Davis. This is purportedly about Lovecraft but is in fact simply a memoir of Greene's life.)

Essays/Editorials

From The Rainbow:

  • "Amateurdom and the Editor"
  • "Recruiting"
  • "Opinion"
  • "Commercialism"
  • "Amateur Aphorisms"
  • "A Game of Chess"
  • "Heins versus Houtain"

From The Oracle:

  • "Fact vs. Opinion" (an editorial against censoring pornography)

Editor/Investor

  • The Organ of the United Amateur Press Association (amateur publication/fanzine)
  • The Rainbow (amateur publication/fanzine)

Sources

  • The Private Life of H.P. Lovecraft, by Sonia Greene (Necronomicon Press, 1985) (ISBN 0-318047-18-7)
  • H.P. Lovecraft: A Life, by S. T. Joshi (Necronomicon Press, 1996) (ISBN 0-940884-88-7)

Notes

  1. ^ Galpin, quoted in S. T. Joshi, H.P. Lovecraft: A Life, p.262.
  2. ^ S. T. Joshi, H.P. Lovecraft: A Life.
  3. ^ Sonia H. Davis, The Private Life of H.P. Lovecraft
  4. ^ Sonia H. Davis, The Private Life of H.P. Lovecraft
  5. ^ S. T. Joshi, H.P. Lovecraft: A Life, p.455.
  6. ^ S. T. Joshi, H.P. Lovecraft: A Life.
  7. ^ Sonia H. Davis, The Private Life of H.P. Lovecraft
  8. ^ S. T. Joshi, H.P. Lovecraft: A Life.
  9. ^ S. T. Joshi, H.P. Lovecraft: A Life.