Missouri is the home state of many notable writers, including poets T.S. Eliot and Langston Hughes, authors Laura Ingalls Wilder and Mark Twain, and playwright Tennessee Williams. Missouri’s contributions to literature can be found in the words of these and other authors whose experiences and observations of the state are recorded in their works. The State Historical Society of Missouri's Manuscript Collections include papers of individual writers of fiction and non-fiction, prose and poetry, as well as records of literary organizations, publishers, and journals and magazines.
Authors and writers from Missouri have made their impact on the state and on the world in a variety of ways. Samuel Clemens, better known as Mark Twain, was a major writer from Missouri whose stories and novels are famous for their humor, vivid details, and memorable characters. A number of classic works, such as The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, are set within Twain's native Missouri and draw heavily on his memories of growing up in Hannibal and piloting steamboats on the Mississippi River as an adult. His natural wit and keen observations of human nature found full expression in his work from the mid-nineteenth century to his death in 1910.
Laura Ingalls Wilder, another well-known writer from Missouri, shared vibrant retellings of episodes from her childhood in the classic Little House historical fiction series, which helped shape the popular idea of the American frontier after their publication in the 1930s and 1940s. Wilder wrote each book in the Little House series about a specific time in her young life. While the books were based on her earlier autobiography, she left some facts out and added fictional elements to make the stories more attractive to young readers.
T.S. Eliot, born in St. Louis, Missouri, was one of the pioneers of the modernism movement in America and Europe in the first half of the twentieth century. His 1922 poem “The Waste Land,” considered one of the twentieth century’s most significant works of poetry, provides a vivid example of modernism’s search for meaning in the face of the disruptions caused by industrialization and urbanization and the horrors of the just-ended First World War. Eliot’s many awards include the Nobel Prize for literature that he received in 1948.
Articles from Missouri Historical Review and Missouri Times
- Armstrong, C. J. "Mark Twain's Early Writings Discovered."
Missouri Historical Review 24 (July 1930): 485-501. - Bailey, Eutopia O. "The Small Town in Twentieth Century Missouri Fiction."
Part I: Missouri Historical Review 49 (April 1955): 230-248.
Part II: Missouri Historical Review 49 (July 1955): 328-341. - Bay, J. Christian "Western Life and Western Books."
Missouri Historical Review 36 (July 1942): 403-411. - Bidewell, George Ivan "Mark Twain's Florida Years."
Missouri Historical Review 40 (January 1946): 159-173. - Brandimarte, Cynthia Ann "Fannie Hurst: A Missouri Girl Makes Good."
Missouri Historical Review 81 (April 1987): 275-295. - Brashear, Minnie M. "Missouri Literature Since the First World War."
Part I: Missouri Historical Review 40 (October 1945): 1-20.
Part II: Missouri Historical Review 40 (April 1946): 330-348.
Part III: Missouri Historical Review 41 (April 1947): 241-265.
"The Missouri Short Story as It Has grown Out of the Tall Tale of the Frontier."
Missouri Historical Review 43 (April 1949): 199-219.
"Missouri Verse and Verse Writers."
Part I: Missouri Historical Review 18 (April 1924): 315-344.
Part II: Missouri Historical Review 19 (October 1924): 36-93. - Breckenridge, William "John Monteith."
Missouri Historical Review 20 (April 1926): 393-396. - Catherine Cranmer "Little Visits with Literary Missourians - Orrick Johns."
Missouri Historical Review 20 (July 1926): 509-515.
"Little Visits with Literary Missourians - Fannie Hurst."
Missouri Historical Review 19 (April 1925): 389-396.
"Little Visits with Literary Missourians - Augustus Thomas."
Missouri Historical Review 20 (April 1926): 399-405.
"Little Visits with Literary Missourians - Zoe Akins."
Missouri Historical Review 20 (January 1926): 252-261.
"Little Visits with Literary Missourians - Sara Teasdale."
Missouri Historical Review 19 (July 1925): 664-674.
"Little Visits with Literary Missourians - Rupert Hughes."
Missouri Historical Review 20 (October 1925): 112-119. - Clymer, Kenton J. "John Hay and Mark Twain."
Missouri Historical Review 67 (April 1973): 397-406. - Dahl, Curtis "Mark Twain and Ben Ely: Two Missouri Boyhoods."
Missouri Historical Review 66 (July 1972): 549-566. - Dains, Mary K. "Missouri Women in Historical Writing."
Missouri Historical Review 83 (July 1989): 417-428. - DeMienil, Alexander "A Century of Missouri Literature."
Missouri Historical Review 15 (October 1920): 74-125. - Dunbar, Laverne J. "The Missouri Mark Twain Collection."
Missouri Historical Review 19 (January 1925): 262-267. - Flanagan, John T. "John Henton Carter alias Commodore Rollingpin."
Missouri Historical Review 63 (October 1968): 38-54. - Gregg, Kate L. "Major Alphonso Wetmore."
Missouri Historical Review 35 (April 1941): 385-393. - Hubach, Robert R. "Walt Whitman Visits St. Louis, 1879."
Missouri Historical Review 37 (July 1943): 386-393.
"St. Louis, Host of Celebrated Nineteenth Century British and American Authors."
Missouri Historical Review 38 (July 1944): 375-387. - Jones, Judy Yaeger. "Some Private Advice on Publishers: Correspondence Between Laura C. Redden and Samuel L. Clemens."
Missouri Historical Review 93 (July 1999): 386-396. - Kraus, Joe W. "Missouri in Fiction: A Review and a Bibliography."
Part I: Missouri Historical Review 42 (April 1948): 209-225.
Part II: Missouri Historical Review 43 (July 1948): 310-324. - Lawson, John D. "A Century of Legal Literature."
Missouri Historical Review 15 (July 1921): 595-610. - Mabbott, T. O. "Mark Twain's Artillery, A Mark Twain Legend."
Missouri Historical Review 25 (October 1930): 23-29. - Olpin, Larry "Missouri and the American Civil War Novel."
Missouri Historical Review 85 (October 1990): 1-20. - Robinson, N. E. "General Ethan Allen Hitchcock: Some Account of a Missouri Author."
Missouri Historical Review 2 (April 1908): 173-187. - Saum, Lewis O. "T. K. Whipple and the Literary Move to America."
Missouri Historical Review 99 (July 2005): 306-316. - Shaddy, Robert Alan "Book Collecting in Missouri: Three Custodians of Culture."
Missouri Historical Review 86 (July 1992): 363-385. - Shoemaker, Floyd C. "Mark Twain, America's Most Widely Read Author."
Missouri Historical Review 29 (April 1935): 165-168. - Spotts, Carle Brooks "The Development of Fiction on the Missouri Frontier (1830-1860)."
Part I: Missouri Historical Review 28 (April 1934): 195-205.
Part II: Missouri Historical Review 28 (July 1934): 275-286.
Part III: Missouri Historical Review (October 1934): 17-26.
Part IV: Missouri Historical Review 29 (January 1935): 100-108.
Part V: Missouri Historical Review 29 (April 1935): 186-194.
Part VI: Missouri Historical Review 29 (July 1935): 279-294. - Stephens, William B. "Arius, The Libyan."
Missouri Historical Review 16 (July 1922): 551-555. - Walker, Robert F. "Nathan Chapman Kouns."
Missouri Historical Review 24 (July 1930): 516-520.
Catalog
Many of the State Historical Society’s holdings are included in the SHSMO online catalog. The State Historical Society holds numerous books on the history and study of literature in Missouri, the Midwest, and the United States generally. The broadest term to search is the subject term “Missouri literature” or the specific author of any work. For a more specific search in Missouri, simply add the subject term “Missouri” to your search (use the Advanced Search mode).
Digital Collections
Historic Missourian Biographies
Missouri has been the home or birthplace of many significant writers and others who have contributed to literary works of note.
- William Wells Brown - His autobiography, Narrative of William W. Brown, A Fugitive Slave, documents his life as a slave in Missouri and is one of most widely published and influential slave narratives.
- Dale Carnegie - Best-selling author of How to Win Friends and Influence People who became a pioneer in the field of self-improvement.
- Samuel Clemens - Also known as Mark Twain, his stories and novels such as The Adventures of Tom Sawyer are famous for their humor, vivid details, and memorable characters.
- Lester Dent - Successful pulp fiction writer of the adventure series featuring the popular fictional character “Doc Savage.”
- T. S. Eliot - Eliot was one of the pioneers of modernism, a movement in art and literature that was popular in America and Europe in the first half of the twentieth century.
- Robert A. Heinlein - Science fiction writer of short stories and novels combining his interests in science, technology, and the military.
- Langston Hughes - He became a crucial voice during the Harlem Renaissance, an African American literary movement of the 1920s and 1930s.
- John Neihardt - He is best known for his collection of epic poems, A Cycle of the West, and his nonfiction account of the life of a Sioux medicine man, Black Elk Speaks.
- Margaret Truman - The only child of President Harry S. Truman, she was best known for her series of murder mysteries set in Washington, DC.
- Laura Ingalls Wilder - One of the most influential children’s authors in American history. Her vibrant retelling of episodes from her childhood in the world-famous Little House historical fiction series helped shape the popular idea of the American frontier.
- Tennessee Williams - One of the greatest playwrights in American history. Between the mid-1940s and the early 1960s, he wrote several award-winning plays, including The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.
Manuscripts
The State Historical Society of Missouri manuscript collections include papers of individual writers of fiction and non-fiction, prose and poetry; records of literary organizations, publishers, and journals and magazines. Includes "popular" and "cultural" writers.