1970: Toni Morrison at Random House.
The Person Scribbling Next Door May Be a Future Nobel Laureate
Toni morrison the author woke early, long before dawn. Toni Morrison the editor worked eight-hour days in a dark glass tower at 201 East 50th Street. The door to her office was always open, and conversations about everything from railroads to Chinese silk screens flowed into the hallway.
At Random House from the late ’60s through the early ’80s, Morrison worked to publish loud and quiet books alike. In publishing, big voices have always ruled the day, but Morrison had an uncanny knack for hearing potential at rest on the page. Sitting at her desk, pencil in hand, marking up onion skins and parchment paper, she took the same level of care with the drafts of Angela Davis and Muhammad Ali as she did with Gayl Jones. “I am continually reimpressed with things I am discovering in the manuscript,” Morrison wrote to Leon Forrest, whose There Is a Tree More Ancient Than Eden was one of the first novels she edited. On another section of the manuscript, she wrote, “This has to be drastically cut. It is quite out of hand.”
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Bu hikaye New York magazine dergisinin April 26 - May 9, 2021 sayısından alınmıştır.
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