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THE FIELD HOUSE  by Robin Clifford  Wood

THE FIELD HOUSE

A Writer’s Life Lost and Found on an Island in Maine

by Robin Clifford Wood

Pub Date: May 4th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-64742-045-1
Publisher: She Writes Press

A writer explores her personal connections to author Rachel Field.

“Something happens during the writing of a biography that feels a lot like falling in love,” Wood writes in her prologue, explaining her intense drive to tell the story of Field, a Newbery Award–winning novelist and poet active in the early 20th century. After purchasing Field’s summer home on Sutton Island, Maine, Wood found herself surrounded by Field’s last remaining possessions and “lingering wisps of [her] creative energy.” Through meticulous research, Wood uses letters and poems to reconstruct Field’s life, from her childhood at the turn of the century to her hard-won success as a children’s author. Field’s childhood in an illustrious family provided inspiration for her legacy, but it was her unrequited love for a gay Southern gentleman and insecurities about her appearance that Wood believes inspired Field’s best poems and her “wonderful” adult novel Time out of Mind (1935), which earned a Kirkus Star, both somewhat overlooked following her death. Field would eventually find love and relocate to California, witnessing the early, bustling days of Hollywood. She tried to build a family until her untimely and surprising death. Interwoven throughout this story are letters directly from Wood to Field detailing her unfaltering admiration and how Field’s story took Wood on her own journeys across the country and on to finding her own voice as a writer. Wood makes some admirable attempts to take some critical distance from Field. She provides insightful analysis of Field’s work, discusses the two women’s similar, yet vastly different, struggles over career and family, and even addresses Field’s privilege and seemingly racist remarks. But Wood always returns to effusive, consistent admiration for her subject matter. Readers may not walk away with the same devotion and excitement that Wood desperately wants to share, but her passionate prose and carefully curated primary sources will certainly convince readers that Field is not a writer to overlook.

An eloquent, detailed tribute to a less well-known but inspiring author.