Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library
Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library P.O. Box 400110 University of Virginia Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4110 URL: https://small.library.virginia.edu/
Ellen Welch
Repository
Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library
Susan Richards Shreve is a prominent writer and English professor of creative writing who founded cultural, literary, and
arts foundations and school writing programs. Her work is embedded into myriad aspects of American literary culture,providing
deep insights to the American literary scene at the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st century. She was born in 1939,
in Toledo, OH., the daughter of Robert Kenneth Richards (1913-1969), a journalist and Government censor during WWII, and Helen
Elizabeth Richards. She received her B.A.(magna cum laude), at the University of Pennsylvania, 1961; and her M.A., at the
University of Virginia, 1969. She published her first book, A Fortunate Madness (1974), which marked the beginning of a consistently
productive and successful publishing career as the author of both children's literature and adult fiction novels.
Shreve has been a significant participant in the Washington D.C. literary community for more than 40 years,combining her role
as a writer with several literary occupations, including co-founder of the Master of Fine Arts Program in Writing at George
Mason University (1980), and as co-founder, President, and Chairman of
the PEN/Faulkner Foundation, one of the leading literary foundations in the United States. At PEN/Faulkner she created the
Writers in Schools program in 1989, which brings published authors and their books into urban schools.
She has also been a Jenny Moore Fellow at George Washington
University, a visiting writer at Princeton University, the School of the Arts of Columbia University,Bennington College Summer
Seminars, and Goucher College.
Further, her marriage (1987) to the literary agent Timothy Seldes (1927-2015), brought her even deeper into the American literary
community. Seldes owned and led the venerable agency Russell & Volkening for 40 years, where his clients included Annie Dillard,
Nadine Gordimer, James Lehrer, Peter Taylor, Barbara
Tuchman, Anne Tyler, and Eudora Welty.
Shreve's son, Porter Shreve is also a novelist and a writing professor, and the two have co-published two anthologies,
Outside the Law: Narratives on Justice in America (1997) and
How We Want to Live: Narratives (1998).
As a very young child, Susan Shreve contracted polio and had a two year stay at Warm Springs, GA., (1950-1952), a hospital
established by Franklin D. Roosevelt for polio rehabilitation. Shreve describes her experience in an autobiographical memoir,
Warm Springs: Traces Of A Childhood At FDR's Polio Haven. In an earlier work of fiction, The Lovely Shoes (2011), Shreve writes
that when she was 11 years old, her mother contacted the Italian fashion designer and shoemaker Salvatore Ferragamo requesting
custom made shoes that would allow her daughter to walk and dance and
otherwise participate in life in a normal manner. Ferragamo agreed, and produced custom made shoes for Shreve for years.
Her novel, A Country Of Strangers, about a Black and White family living on the same farm was under option for film, and Daughters
Of The New World was an NBC mini series under the title A Will Of Their Own. Shreve was often a guest on the MacNeil Lehrer
Newshour on PBS.
Honors and awards include:
Jenny McKean Moore Award, George Washington University, 1978;
Notable Book citation, American Library Association (ALA), 1979, for
Family Secrets: Five Very Important Stories;
Notable Children's Trade Book in the Field of Social Studies, National Council for Social Studies and the Children's Book
Council joint committee, 1980, for Family Secrets: Five Very Important Stories;
Best Book for Young Adults citation, ALA, 1980, for
The Masquerade;
PEN/Faulkner writers award.
Guggenheim Fellowship grant in fiction, 1980;
National Endowment for the Arts fiction award, 1982;
Grub Street Award in Non-Fiction
Edgar Allan Poe Award, Mystery Writers of America, 1988, for
Lucy Forever and Miss Rosetree, Shrinks for Best Juvenile Novel.
Woodrow Wilson fellowships, West Virginia Wesleyan, 1994, and Bates College, 1997;
Lila Wallace Readers Digest Foundation grant.
Alumni Award at the Sidwell Friends School
Writers for Writers Award from Poets and Writers
Sources:
Gerald W. Cloud
Rare Books • Manuscripts • Archives
Susan Richards Shreve. Wikipedia. Accessed 5/30/25
This collection contains the papers of Susan Richard Shreve (b. 1939), a prominent American author, a professor of Creative
Writing at George Mason University and a co-founder of the PEN/Faulkner Foundation (1985) for which she served as a board
member and chairman.
The collection documents her literary and teaching career with manuscripts, typescripts, proofs, journals, correspondence,
contracts, clippings, digital files, and other materials related to her authorship and teaching.
Shreve has published fifteen novels, including a memoir "Warm Springs: Traces of a Childhood." She has also published thirty
books for children, and edited and co-edited five anthologies spanning from 1974-2019. Her writing is described as having
"snap and verve" (New York Times) and marks a significant contribution to the genre. As an author of children's books, Shreve
has been described as a "master of subtle and wise perception" (Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books). Her writing
in general has consistently taken on a broad range of controversial topics, including political ideology (Children of Power,
1979, which tackles McCarthyism and responses to it), terrorism (Plum and Jaggers, 2000); disability (The Lovely Shoes, 2011)
and Warm Springs, 2008); perceptions of racial identity (Glimmer, 1997, as "Annie Waters"); suicide, old age, and divorce
(Family Secrets, 1979); and unwed parenthood (Loveletters, 1978, a book which was suppressed by its own publisher amid a controversy
between writers, reviewers, and educators, with a subsequent debate in the press that Loveletters should be banned in schools).
Her books are page-turners with rich character descriptions often likened to Charles Dickens, and filled with dramatic events.
The bulk of the collection represents her writings, including notebooks with manuscript drafts of many of her works and typescripts,
many with annotations, including original versions of novels and stories with alternate titles and unpublished works including
I Can Touch an Autumn Morning, Wooden And Wicker, In The Center Ring, The Unadoptables, and Geography Of A Marriage.
Also included are book files which are(organized alphabetically by title) and consist of correspondence, clippings, reviews,
promotional material, and ephemera such as dustjackets.
The correspondence includes letters from Shreve's agent, publisher, and editor as well as readers, writers,faculty, other
literary agents, journalists, and Washington D.C. residents associated with publishing, writing, and PEN/Faulkner. There are
combined personal and professional letters as the author kept these together in her life. There are notable letters from
Nicolas Delbanco,Richard Ford, John Irving, Edward P. Jones, Gordon Lish, Joyce Carol Oates, Tim O'Brien, Nan Talese, and
Anne Tyler.
Also of interest is correspondence with Edward P. Jones when he was a student at the University of Virginia and having doubts
about his writing career while studying for an education. There is also a draft of an article by Shreve in regard to the work
of Amiri Bakara who received a PEN/Faulkner award. Shreve often included African American and LBGT perspectives in her writing.
The collection includes the business side of literary work as there are more than sixty contracts as well as printed articles
and newspaper clippings. The contracts have limited access due to containing personal information.
There are also address books with entries from dozens of writers, editors, publishers, including Saul Bellow, Donald Bartheleme,
John Irving, Bernard Malamud, Arthur Miller, Toni Morrison, Joyce Carol Oates, Tim O'Brien, Walker Percy, Eudora Welty, etc.
and many others.
The Digital files comprise 911 files. These include a combination of files from her professional writing and teaching career
between 2000 and 2020. These files represent a wide range of works, including manuscripts of published and unpublished books
and professional writings associated with her novels, her teaching, and her role in the literary community.
Sources:
Gerald W. Cloud
Rare Books • Manuscripts • Archives
Susan Richards Shreve. Wikipedia. Accessed 5/30/25
The collection is arranged into 10 series. Series 1. Manuscripts and notebooks, Series 2. Typescripts, Series 3. Bookfiles,
Series 4. Essays, Articles, and Newspaper clippings, Series 5. Correspondence, Series 6. Contracts (need review for access),
Series 7. Teaching, Series 8. PEN/Faulkner and other organizations, Series 9. Personal and miscellaneous, Series 10. Schedule
Planners, and notebooks.
Books are organized alphabetically by title. Correspondence is arranged alphabetically for some correspondents B-W and chronologically
for general correspondence. This arrangement follows the original order of Susan Richards Shreve's files. Periodicals contain
ads and reviews of her books and have been placed in the bookfiles by title of her books.
"Glimmer" by Annie Waters (pseudonym for Shreve) manuscript for published novel about race and gender identity
Mixed Materials [X032669473] box: 3 folder: 5-6
"Miracle Play"
Mixed Materials [X032669474] box: 4 folder: 1-2
"Miracle Play"
Mixed Materials [X032669474] box: 4 folder: 3-4
"The Nightmares Of Geranium Street"
Mixed Materials [X032669474] box: 4 folder: 5-7
"Plum and Jaggers"
Mixed Materials [X032669475] box: 5 folder: 1-2
"Plum and Jaggers"
Mixed Materials [X032669475] box: 5 folder: 3-7
"Queen Of Hearts"
Mixed Materials [X032669476] box: 6 folder: 1
Notebook containing several manuscripts: Autobiography, "Queen Of Hearts", "Lucy Forever and Miss Rosetree, Shrinks", and
"Lily Spenser and the Runaway Baby"
Correspondents include Richard Bausch, Irving Berlin, John Barth, Ben Bradlee, former President Bill Clinton, Charles Corn,
Nicholas Del Banco, Annie Dillard, Richard Ford, Jonathan Galassi, Gail Godwin, Doris Grumbach, Lillian Hellman, Daniel Halpern,
Don Hendrie, Jr., Sherry Huber, John Irving, Edward P. Jones, Gordon Lish, Charles McGrath, Mike MacNeil and Jim Lehrer (includes
Shreve stories), Walter and Joan Mondale, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mudd, Joyce Carol Oates, Tim O'Brien, Robbin Hawkins, Marion
Seldes, Tim Seldes, Russell & Volkening, Inc., Jim Salter, Wallace Stegner, Elizabeth Strout, Nan Talese, Anne Tyler, Eudora
Welty, and Geoffrey Wolff.
These include a combination of files from her professional writing and teaching career between 2000 and 2020. These files
represent a wide range of works, including manuscripts of published and unpublished books and professional writings associated
with her novels, her teaching, and her role in the literary community.
Conditions Governing Access
Some digital files may have information protected under FERPA and need to be reviewed by an archivist. Access to born-digital
files must be made in advance. Please contact Special Collections via our online Reference Request form, https://small.library.virginia.edu/services/reference-request,
to request access to these materials. Please be aware that additional actions may be required to make these items available.
Items will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis before access can be made. Depending on the size of the request, making them
available may take some time.