Eleanor Perenyi

Eleanor Spencer Stone Perényi (later Perenyi, January 4, 1918 – May 3, 2009)[1] was a gardener and author. She wrote several books including Green Thoughts, a collection of essays based on her own gardening experiences.

Eleanor Perenyi
BornEleanor Spencer Stone
(1918-01-04)January 4, 1918
DiedMay 3, 2009(2009-05-03) (aged 91)
Stonington
OccupationAuthor

Biography

Eleanor Perenyi was the daughter of a US Navy officer, Ellis S. Stone and Grace Zaring Stone. Grace Zaring Stone wrote her anti-Nazi novel Escape under the pseudonym Ethel Vance, for fear of jeopardizing the safety of her daughter, who was then living with her husband, the Hungarian noble Baron Zsigmond Perényi, in pro-Fascist Hungary, then to be an ally of the Axis powers during World War II.[2]

Works

Perenyi is best known as the author of Green Thoughts: A Writer in the Garden, which drew on her work on her husband's rural estate near the present-day town of Vynohradiv, Ukraine (the former Nagyszőlős, Hungary). Her life there is further recorded in her 1946 memoir More Was Lost, which describes her marriage to her Hungarian noble husband and the impact of World War II on life in rural Hungary. Her other books include the Civil War novel The Bright Sword (1955) and a study of Franz Liszt.

Green Thoughts was reviewed by Brooke Astor in The New York Times.[3]

More Was Lost was reprinted by New York Review of Books Press in 2016 with an introduction by the poet J.D. McClatchy and is reviewed by Sadie Stein in The Paris Review.[4]

Award

Perenyi was given an award in literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1982.[5]

References

  1. Fox, Margalit (May 6, 2009). "Eleanor Perenyi, Writer and Gardener, Dies at 91". The New York Times. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
  2. Publisher's biography Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  3. Astor, Brooke (October 11, 1981). "The Trouble With Petunias". The New York Times. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
  4. Stein, Sadie. (March 11, 2016). "Helped by Recollection: On Eleanor Perenyi". The Paris Review. Retrieved May 28, 2019.
  5. "Harold D. Vursell Memorial Award recipients". American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. Archived from the original on October 13, 2008. Retrieved May 7, 2009.

Further reading

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