Joan Williams was a writer born in Memphis in 1928, and before her death in 2004, her first novel, The Morning and the Evening (1961), had been a finalist for the National Book Award. Robert Penn Warren and Joyce Carol Oates wrote admiringly of her novel Old Powder Man (1966). And another novel, The Wintering (1971) โ€” inspired by Williamsโ€™ real-life relationship with William Faulkner early in her career โ€” won the praise of Anne Tyler. Other of Williamsโ€™ works include two novels, County Woman (1982) and Pay the Piper (1988), and a short-story collection, Pariah and Other Stories (1983).

[jump]

joan_williams_morning.png

And now, all six of Williamsโ€™ titles are available through digital publisher Open Road Integrated Media in ebook form. Williamsโ€™ essay โ€œTwenty Will Not Come Againโ€ โ€” on her relationship with Faulkner and first published in the Atlantic Monthly โ€” is included in the ebook edition of The Wintering.

For more on that relationship, see Memphian Lisa C. Hickmanโ€™s William Faulkner and Joan Williams: The Romance of Two Writers (2006). (There are plans in the works for that book too to come out in an ebook edition from McFarland.) And for a biographical sketch of Williamsโ€™ life, a publication history, and bibliography, see Hickmanโ€™s useful overview at The Mississippi Writers Page.

If you havenโ€™t read Joan Williams, now would be the time. As Grace Srinivasiah of Open Road wrote in an email, โ€œWe hope that the release of Joan Williamsโ€™ ebooks will not only continue to preserve her legacy, but also introduce Williams to a new generation of readers who are not familiar with this often overlooked author.โ€

Go to Open Roadโ€™s website for more information on the Joan Williams collection. The website also make it easy to order from a number of outlets, including Amazon, iTunes, and Google Play. โ€ข