Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

‘Bridges of Madison County’ author

- By Matt Schudel

Robert James Waller, whose melodramat­ic novel “The Bridges of Madison County,” about the love affair of a roaming photograph­er and a lonely Iowa farm wife, became runaway best seller in the 1990s and formed the basis for a 1995 film starring Clint Eastwood and Meryl Streep, died Friday at his home in Fredericks­burg, Texas. He was 77.

A friend, Scott Cawelti, told the Associated Press that the cause was multiple myeloma, a form of cancer.

Waller had written a few essays but had never attempted fiction before “The Bridges of Madison County.” He was 52 and on leave from his job as a professor of business management when he wrote the book in a feverish two-week period.

“It all just came pouring out,” he told the New York Daily News. “Practicall­y wrote itself. I just typed it. Almost couldn’t keep up with the words. I don’t know where they came from.”

When the novel was published in 1992, expectatio­ns were modest. Yet Waller’s 171-page novel found an eager audience through word-of-mouth recommenda­tions and ended up spending 164 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, including nearly a full year at No. 1.

“Bridges” became a publishing phenomenon, selling nearly 6 million copies in the United States in two years. Tens of millions of copies are in print worldwide.

The novel’s plot concerns a photograph­er, Robert Kincaid, who has come to Madison County, Iowa, in 1965 to photograph its picturesqu­e covered bridges for National Geographic magazine. While there, he asks directions of an Italian-born farm wife named Francesca Johnson, and they embark on a passionate four-day romance while her family is away.

The initial reviews were lukewarm at best. A Chicago Sun-Times critic called it “syrupy, platitudin­ous pap,” and others lampooned the book’s overwrough­t emotionali­sm and wooden prose.

Kincaid, considerat­e enough to clean the tub after taking a bath, is a Camel-smoking vegetarian smitten by Francesca and her unfulfille­d longings.

“I am the highway and a peregrine,” he says, “and all the sails that ever went to sea.”

Francesca responds in kind, saying, “You’re so powerful, it’s frightenin­g.”

The quality of the prose did not put off readers. Instead, they were enraptured by the romantic tale of two adults sharing, if only for a short time, a lifechangi­ng passion.

Excerpts of “Bridges” appeared in Cosmopolit­an magazine, and television host Oprah Winfrey invited Waller to discuss “Bridges” on her show, calling it her “favorite book of the year.”

Lanky and silver-haired, Waller looked the part of the handsome wayfaring stranger, going so far as to say, “Of course I’m Robert Kincaid. Just look at me.”

The 1995 film, directed by Eastwood who also starred as Kincaid, was filmed on location in Iowa and pulled in $182 million at the box office. The screenwrit­ers tossed out much of Waller’s portentous prose, opting to let the cinematogr­aphy and the chiseled faces of Eastwood and Streep carry the story line.

“Forget the book,” read a headline in the Houston Chronicle. “See the movie.”

“Bridges” fans flocked to southern Iowa to see the places visited by Waller’s imagined characters. (It was the second time in a decade that a first novelist had used Iowa as the setting for an unexpected best seller. W.P. Kinsella’s “Shoeless Joe,” about an Iowa farmer with dreams of bringing baseball immortals back to life, was published in 1982.)

Hundreds of weddings were performed under the roofs of Madison County’s covered bridges.

Waller’s second novel, “Slow Waltz at Cedar Bend,” about another grownup affair, this time on a college campus, replaced “Bridges” as No. 1 on the bestseller lists in 1993. He released an album of songs tied into “Bridges,” and signed so many autographs that he reportedly developed carpal tunnel syndrome. “His marriage to Georgia Wiedemeier ended in divorce. Survivors include his second wife, Linda Bow of Fredericks­burg; and a daughter from his first marriage.

A stage musical of “The Bridges of Madison County” appeared on Broadway in 2014 and had a national tour. In 2002, Waller revisited the characters of “Bridges” in “A Thousand Country Roads.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? Robert James Waller’s novel “The Bridges of Madison County” was turned into a movie starring Meryl Streep and Clint Eastwood.
AP FILE Robert James Waller’s novel “The Bridges of Madison County” was turned into a movie starring Meryl Streep and Clint Eastwood.

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