0246
Austin, Mary Hunter (1868-1934). American author and critic.
Born in Carlinville, IL, Mary Hunter received a BS from Blackburn
College in 1888, the same year she moved with her mother and siblings to
California’s San Joaquin Valley. In 1891 she married Stafford Wallace
Austin. In 1903, they separated (they divorced in 1915) and her collection
of California desert stories, The Land of Little
Rain, appeared. Between 1903 and 1924, Austin spent periods of time in
the Greenwich Village neighborhood of New York City; London, England; and
Carmel, CA; however, most of her literary output continued to focus on the
deserts of California and the Southwest. Cather may have met Austin as early
as 1910, and Austin’s poetry appeared in McClure’s
Magazine in 1911 and 1912. In February 1919 Austin wrote Ferris
Greenslet of Houghton Mifflin, their mutual publisher, praising My Ántonia (1918) and asking for additional
information and materials to write an appreciation of Cather for El Palacio, a magazine published in Santa Fe, NM; her
essay appeared in 1920. When Cather and Edith Lewis travelled to the
Southwest in 1925, they saw Austin in New Mexico, where she had built Casa
Querida in Santa Fe in 1924. When Cather returned in 1926 to continue
research and writing of Death Comes for the
Archbishop (1927), Austin offered her the use of her empty house to
work in. Cather inscribed a copy of Archbishop “For
Mary Austin, in whose lovely study I wrote the last chapters of this book,”
but she began denying that she had written any part of the novel in Casa
Querida after Austin published Earth Horizon (1932),
in which she called Cather’s celebration of French missionary priests a
“calamity” for Southwestern culture. Austin died at home two years later.