When Dawn Powell died in 1965, virtually all her books were out of  print. Not a single historical survey of American literature mentioned  her, even in passing. And so she slept, seemingly destined to be  forgotten – or, to put it more exactly, never to be remembered. 
How  things have changed! Numerous novels by Dawn Powell are currently  available, along with her diaries and short stories. She has joined the  Library of America, admitted to the illustrious company of Ralph Waldo  Emerson, Henry Adams, Frederick Douglass, and Edith Wharton. She is  taught in college and read with delight on vacation. For the  contemporary poet and novelist Lisa Zeidner, writing in
The New York Times Book Review,  Powell “is wittier than Dorothy Parker, dissects the rich better than  F. Scott Fitzgerald, is more plaintive than Willa Cather in her  evocation of the heartland, and has a more supple control of satirical  voice than Evelyn Waugh.” For his part, Gore Vidal offered a simple  reason for Powell’s sudden popularity in the early Twentieth Century:  “We are catching up to her.”
Dawn Powell was born in Mt. Gilead,  Ohio, on November 28, 1896, the second of three daughters. Her father  was a traveling salesman, and her mother died a few days after Dawn  turned seven. After enduring great cruelty at the hands of her  stepmother, Dawn ran away at the age of thirteen and eventually arrived  at the home of her maternal aunt, who served hot meals to travelers  emerging from the train station across the street. Dawn worked her way  through college and made it to New York. There she married a young  advertising executive and had one child, a boy who suffered from autism,  then an unknown condition.
Powell referred to herself as a  “permanent visitor” in her adopted Manhattan and brought to her writing a  perspective gained from her upbringing in Middle America. She knew many  of the great writers of her time, and Diana Trilling famously said it  was Dawn “who really says the funny things for which Dorothy Parker gets  credit.” Ernest Hemingway called her his “favorite living writer.” She  was one of America’ s great novelists, and yet when she died in 1965 she  was buried in an unmarked grave in New York’s Potter’s Field.											
											
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