My husband knows I enjoy literary tourism, and when he was planning our trip to the South last January, he scouted out THREE author-related sites: The F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Museum, The Monroe County Courthouse (which houses artifacts related to Harper Lee and Truman Capote,) and Cross Creek, the Florida home of writer Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (hereafter referred to as MKR) for thirteen years. To be honest, before this visit, the only thing I knew about MKR was that she penned The Yearling, and that it won the Pulitzer Prize a long, long time ago.
It turns out that The Yearling was based on MKR's personal experiences in Cross Creek. Her farm is now a state historic site, and it is a great place to visit.
MKR's house and farm have also been designated a National Historic Landmark:
I recently read Out of Africa by Isak Dinesen, and in many ways MKR's challenging experience trying to farm oranges in Florida among the backwoods people reminds me of Dinesen's struggle to make a living growing tobacco in Kenya among the Kikiyu and Masai people. Both women had husbands who were instrumental in purchasing the farms but then disappeared, leaving the women to make a go of it on their own. Both books are full of short, loosely related anecdotes about their experiences.
When MKR moved into the house, it was pretty decrepit, and over the next few years she remodeled it and connected two buildings on the property to make them one.
It turns out that The Yearling was based on MKR's personal experiences in Cross Creek. Her farm is now a state historic site, and it is a great place to visit.
MKR's house and farm have also been designated a National Historic Landmark:
I recently read Out of Africa by Isak Dinesen, and in many ways MKR's challenging experience trying to farm oranges in Florida among the backwoods people reminds me of Dinesen's struggle to make a living growing tobacco in Kenya among the Kikiyu and Masai people. Both women had husbands who were instrumental in purchasing the farms but then disappeared, leaving the women to make a go of it on their own. Both books are full of short, loosely related anecdotes about their experiences.
One of MKR's orange trees still grows in her yard, but most of her grove has been overtaken by the forest. |