Lyle Saxon

Lyle Saxon

Lyle Saxon was a respected New Orleans journalist who reported for The Times-Picayune. He was also an ardent student of the history of the city and wrote 6 books on the subject. His most popular titles include "Fabulous New Orleans" recounting the city's celebrated past as set against his memories of his first Mardi Gras during the turn of the 20th century: "Gumbo Ya-Ya", a compilation of native folk stories from Louisiana, including the Loup Garou and the Lalaurie House: and "Old Louisiana", a local bestseller from its introduction in 1929.

Contemporary historians of the city rely heavily on Saxon's works for reference.

He was born in Bellingham, Washington in 1891, [http://www.lylesaxon.com/lifeofsaxon.html lifeofsaxon ] ] and died in 1946.

Bibliography

*Father Mississippi (1927)
*Fabulous New Orleans (1928)
*Old Louisiana (1929
*Lafitte the Pirate (1930)
*Children of Strangers (novel) (1937)All three were journalists. His grandmother, Elizabeth Lyle Saxon, was also a poet, author, and prominent early suffragette. In addition, his maternal grandfather, Michael Chambers, owned the first bookstore in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, long an institution in the town.

Saxon's parents' marriage disintegrated shortly after his birth, and apparently he never afterwards had any contact with his father. He grew up in his grandfather's house with his mother and two spinster aunts.

Young Lyle aspired to attend an Eastern college, but his genteel mother could not afford to send him to an Ivy-league college. Instead, he attended Louisiana State University in his hometown, but left college one course short of a degree.

By 1919 Saxon was in New Orleans writing for the city's leading newspaper, The Times-Picayune. After a stint as a general reporter he began to write book reviews and fiction for the newspaper, as well as features about the city, its history and unique culture.

Over a four-month period in 1921, he wrote a fictionalized history of New Orleans. In it, a newspaperman, quite like Saxon himself, has an almost mystical love for the city. It is not surprising, therefore, that Saxon once wrote tellingly to a friend, "I--as a man--am also a lover. I shall try to tell you of the woman to whom I offer my love . . . this woman, New Orleans."

Saxon lived in the French Quarter, much to the consternation of friends who begged him not to live "among the thieves and squalor" that the city's oldest section then attracted. He personally restored two important buildings himself and led the city's preservationist movement.

His enthusiasm for the romanticism and mystique of the Quarter was boundless, and he used his newspaper pulpit to preach its charms. His effect was both immediate and long-lasting. Robert Tallant, a literary colleague, wrote that, largely due to Saxon, the French Quarter became "more of an art colony, less an underworld."

Soon Saxon began to attract a brilliant assortment of young writers and artists. Traipsing in and out of his salon on Royal Street, and swigging contraband Prohibition liquor, were William Faulker, William Spratling, Sherwood and Elizabeth Anderson, Edmund Wilson, Dorothy Dix, John Dos Passos, and John Steinbeck.

Saxon quit the newspaper in 1926. Over the next four years he produced four very popular books, Father Mississippi, Fabulous New Orleans, Old Louisiana, and Lafitte the Pirate. He also wrote some well-received short stories and a novel, Children of Strangers.

In 1935 he was appointed director of the W.P.A. Federal Writers' Project in Louisiana and he also organized the Negro History Unit of the Writers' Project. Saxon supervised more than a hundred field workers and edited their reports into two highly-regarded guide books, New Orleans City Guide (1938) and Louisiana: A Guide to the State (1941). Later the accumulated research into Louisiana folklore was published as Gumbo Ya-Ya (1945).

These works, together with his newspaper writing, cemented Saxon's reputation as New Orleans' most ardent literary lover.

Saxon's personal love life is more difficult to discern. Some authorities suggest that his only great love was his childhood friend, George Favrot, who went to Europe as a World War I soldier and died in Paris in 1918. Other sources maintain that he had a sexual relationship with Joe Gilmore, his long-time black valet.

Biographer James W. Thomas interviewed many of Saxon's closest friends and concluded, "Saxon's homosexual affairs were discreet, never a problem for his heterosexual friends, and not a significant part of his literary life."

Indeed, homosexual characters or subjects do not appear anywhere in his published work. But in his best fiction, Saxon presents protagonists as iconoclasts who break rigid codes of conduct. They defy societal constricts of race in the short story "Cane River" (1926) and the novel Children of Strangers (1937), and constricts of sex in "The Centaur Plays Croquet" (1927), also a short story,Lyle Saxon's love for New Orleans lives on through his timeless books.

References

External links

* [http://www.lylesaxon.com/ The Life and Works of Lyle Saxon]
*findagrave|5772213


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