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#0624: Willa Cather to Dorothy Canfield Fisher, [October 3, 1922]

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Dear Dorothy1:

You ask for news of Claude3—well, if rowing and argument can sell a book, this one ought to sell. The postman now leaves my mail with the janitor—mailbox on won't hold it. Today I got letters from two Lutheran preachers, one telling me I would go to Hell, surely; the other telling me I had "given American Lit. a lasting" etc.

I send you a few reviews which express the variety in tone. Don't Someday I send you or bring you the letters that are beginning to come from ex-Soldiers. They are the thing that count for me, and so far they've all been lovely.

Yesterday I had tea with Mr. & Mrs. Will Allen White4what a nice man. He kept telling me to keep my seat and "don't let them make you back down." Nothing to back down from. I knew the boy. I'd back down on the writing, but that's not what irks them. He was awfully funny: he kept explaining to his wife "Her clique has let her down—when thy Nathan5 and thy Mencken6 forsake thee, you understand."

Sinclair Lewis7 was there part of the time, at tea, and I was so glad I don't feel a particle sore at him. If I feel the least sore, I show it so plainly, alas! I would be rather stiff with some people people about a review8 like that, but somehow I'm not with him—he's so funny. This is just to give you news of Claude—I am told very substantial re-orders have begun to come in from the West.

Hastily Willa

Yes, I do want to meet Robert Frost9!