Friday, July 26, 2024

FFB: THE STORY OF STORY MAGAZINE by Martha Foley (assembled and notes added in part by Jay Neugeboren), W.W. Norton 1980; and Neugeboren's new Foley family essay in THE AMERICAN SCHOLAR, Summer, 2024

A redux post, sparked by Jay Neugeboren's new essay in The American Scholar (Summer 2024) about his helping the granddaughters of Martha Foley finally meet each other, as the children of her long-dead son David Burnett. (Courtesy Paul Di Filippo.)

Friday, August 22, 2014

FFB: THE STORY OF STORY MAGAZINE by Martha Foley (assembled and notes added in part by Jay Neugeboren), W.W. Norton 1980


Jay Neugeboren, in his introduction to the published form of Foley's memoirs in progress at the time of her death, notes the dire state she found herself in, barely getting by on her royalties from editing Best American Short Stories (after four decades at that desk, she had taken over from the founding editor, her friend, after he was killed in England by Nazi bombing from the air), mourning the death of her son (who had been a drug addict, apparently a heroin junkie), isolated and ailing. Which seems very strange indeed, given the breadth of her early career, before and during founding and editing Story (or, as she always refers to it, STORY...all caps and in italics), and leaving Story to take on the BASS position and divorcing Whit Burnett, who kept the magazine they had co-founded (and ran it into the ground, though also saw it revived fleetingly thrice before his death, the first time as a hardcover "magazine" published by Ace Books owner A. A. Wyn, the third time, with a new editor, by Scholastic Magazines, and the eventual fourth revival of the title for a decade by the Writer's Digest people).

Incomplete as the account is, Foley had packed a lot of living into her first decades, beginning her memoirs with a reminiscence of lonely and abused childhood after her parents became seriously ill and had to place Foley and siblings with resentful relatives (or other surrogates), but loving the legacy of the library her parents had assembled, which traveled with the younger Foleys. Not long after high school, Alice Paul finds Foley doing some small tasks at the Socialist Party HQ in New York, when coming over with other Women's Party activists looking for reinforcements to protest that antifeminist crusader, Woodrow Wilson, returning from Europe (particularly amusing when we consider how famously his wife would be the voice of the, and probably the acting, President in his ill last years (he is easily among our most overrated Presidents); Foley, Paul and the other protestors were jailed but not processed, and Foley's firsthand career investigating the corruption of the larger society had begun. She would be drawn into journalism, working with Cornelius Vanderbilt in Los Angeles (and serving as one of the key editors on CV's paper there), meeting Whit Burnett and moving with him to New York and then onto foreign correspondence for major papers in Paris and Vienna, and beginning to publish Story in the face of the early 1930s narrowing of the short-fiction markets, particularly among the more intellectual and arty generalist magazines (Mencken and Nathan's move from the fiction-heavy The Smart Set to the essay-oriented The American Mercury being a key impetus, another being the closure of the key experimental little magazine transition to fiction, rather than poetry, just before Foley and Burnett took the plunge). Meanwhile, Story would publish the first stories, and later work, of folks ranging from John D. MacDonald to J. D. Salinger, Zora Neale Hurston to William Saroyan, (almost) Ernest Hemingway and his inspiration, Gertrude Stein (neither of whom Foley was ever terribly impressed with as people) to (definitely) Nelson Algren (whom she liked enormously till his public rudeness about his affair with Simone de Beauvoir), Carson McCullers to John Cheever, Kay Boyle to Erskine Caldwell, Peter de Vries to Norman Mailer. While building this legacy, she developed long friendships the likes of fellow reporter and historian William Shirer and a banker turned writer/publisher who was going by Rex Stout (and she introduced him to the model 
note Foley credits her son with co-editing


for Nero 















Wolfe...Foley suspects Stout modeled Archie Goodwin on himself). 

And as incomplete as this review is under the current circumstances, most of this book is written in great good humor (with the necessary seriousness brought to many issues of the times, and nostalgia never allowed to go unchecked) and touches on the careers and Foley's interactions with many more folks than I cite here (hell, Neugeboren, in going through the notes and the completed majority of the manuscript, finds himself wondering what happened to such Foley discoveries as A. I. Bezzerides--apparently no film buff, Jay). Eminently rewarding, as well as sobering as one considers how Foley's late life was spent. 

Please see B. V. Lawson's Friday review and the list of other reviews for this week.

5 comments:

Diane Kelley said...

I'm still reading short stories, but most of them are not current stories. The decline of reading, publishing, and writing started around the time television arrived. The Internet and computer gaming pretty much finished it off for mass audiences. You and I and few million readers are all that survive the digital dominance.

Todd Mason said...

Though, George, there still are at least a subculture of even young readers...this article in the NYT, for example, might cherry-pick the youngsters going through the the sales stacks of the Robert Gottlieb estate collection of drama/film books, but at least some are bridging that gap: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/23/style/robert-gottlieb-book-sale.html?unlocked_article_code=1.-U0.n-H4.gIVyc5QEmO06&smid=url-share

Paper isn't the dominant mass medium any longer...harder to preserve, yet both easier to store and to lose in code. Less denuding of forests, more server-farm demands. We can only guess where this all leads, as we nurse too-probable suspicions and fears.

TracyK said...

Does Story Magazine still exist? I like the connection to Rex Stout.

Todd Mason said...

Thanks for asking, as I've just learned I've not been keeping up--yes, there is Apparently an active version that "will" (sic) publish its new, 19th issue in June. https://www.storymagazine.org/store/2024-summer-issue-19/

Phil Stephensen-Payne's FICTIONMAGS INDEX notes there have been two short-run (so far!) attempts to revive STORY since the decade-long WRITERS' DIGEST version folded, a respectable run from 1989-2000. Detailed (with links to indices) here: http://www.philsp.com/data/data531.html#STORY1931

Apparently, Stout was also involved with the founding of (the initially raffish) Vanguard Press, as well. https://socialistjazz.blogspot.com/2014/08/ffb-not-at-night-edited-by-herbert.html

Todd Mason said...

And I see that, a day (or so) after it popped up on Patti Abbott's Blogspot blog, that the new comments format has popped up here, too. Not sure it's an improvement, even if "threaded"...