Chattanooga Times Free Press

Anita Shreve, author of ‘Resistance’ and ‘The Pilot’s Wife,’ dies

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Anita Shreve, the best-selling novelist who explored how women responded to crises past and present in her native New England in favorites such as “The Pilot’s Wife,” “Testimony” and “The Weight of Water,” has died. She was 71.

Publisher Alfred A. Knopf said Shreve, who had been battling cancer, died Thursday at her home in New Hampshire. Shreve announced her illness last year on Facebook, writing that a “medical emergency” would prevent her from touring for what became her last novel, “The Stars Are Fire.”

Knopf editor Jordan Pavlin said in a statement Friday that Shreve’s “writing has touched the lives of millions of readers around the world, and she did some of her most elegant, rich, and unforgetta­ble work in the last years of her life.” Fellow writers, from Jodi Picoult to Terry McMillan, also offered tributes. Sue Monk Kidd tweeted that Shreve was “an amazing writer who offered unparallel­ed generosity to other writers, including me.”

Shreve’s novels sold millions of copies, especially after Oprah Winfrey chose “The Pilot’s Wife” for her book club in 1999. Shreve was also a favorite source for Hollywood. “The Pilot’s Wife,” “Resistance” and “The Weight of Water” all were adapted into movies. Her literary honors included an O.Henry Prize for the story “Past the Island, Drifting” and being a finalist for England’s Orange Prize for “The Weight of Water.” Shreve wrote 19 novels in all, and preferred to work in longhand.

“The creative impulse, the thing that gets deep inside me, goes from the brain to the fingertips,” she told The Writer magazine. “When you’re writing by hand, even when you’re not consciousl­y thinking about it, you’re constructi­ng sentences in the best way possible. And I still get the thrill of the clean pad of notepaper and the pencil all sharpened.”

Born in Dedham, Mass., and a graduate of Tufts University, she began writing fiction while a high school teacher in Reading, Mass., and worked for a time as a journalist in Kenya. As a teenager, she had loved Eugene O’Neill’s “Long Day’s Journey Into Night” and aspired to “the romantic angst of a tragic writer.” Around the same time, she spent a snowy afternoon reading Edith Wharton’s spare and bitter “Ethan Frome” and would cite it as a lasting influence.

“The universe within Wharton’s enduring tale is snowbound and isolated, just as frozen and stark as the world outside my window that day,” Shreve wrote in Winfrey’s magazine “O” in 2004. “Never before had I experience­d reality and fiction merging so powerfully. I have said often that this book was the beginning of my life as a novelist.”

Shreve was married twice, mostly recently to John Osborn. She had two daughters.

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Anita Shreve

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