![]() ![]() ![]() The Mississippi Delta is almost like its own character in the memoir-what does Mary teach us about that region? Hamilton, who helped bring Trials of the Earth to print and is working toward a possible film adaptation, shares some of his favorite details from the memoir: Hamilton has found this world good, and so this is a book of much laughter as well as tragedy.” In the preface, Davis wrote: “At the very end of the book, when she speaks of dying, she is still able to say, innocently and with no thought of irony, that she will soon be going to a better world if such can be.… In spite of everything, Mrs. The Hamilton estate eventually secured the copyright and was able to bring the story full circle by publishing it with Little, Brown-the same company that had first rejected it. In 1992, the University of Mississippi Press discovered a copy of the manuscript and published it, unbeknownst to Hamilton’s family. It didn’t win and was seemingly forgotten. Davis entered an early draft of the memoir into a competition sponsored by Little, Brown in 1933. ![]() Late in her life, Hamilton’s neighbor and friend, Helen Dick Davis-who was also an editor-encouraged Hamilton to write down her recollections. ![]()
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