Helen Weaver (June 18, 1931 – April 13, 2021)[1] was an American writer and translator. She translated over fifty books from French. Antonin Artaud: Selected Writings was a Finalist for the
National Book Award in translation in 1977.[2][3]
Weaver was the general editor, a contributor and a translator for the Larousse Encyclopedia of Astrology (1980).[4] In 2001 she published The Daisy Sutra, a book on animal communication.[5] In 2009 Weaver published The Awakener: A Memoir of Kerouac and the Fifties.
Jack Kerouac (1922–1969) was a prominent writer and poet of the
Beat Generation. In her review in The New York Times,
Tara McKelvey wrote "Kerouac’s soul lives on through many people —
Joyce Johnson, for one — but few have been as adept as Weaver at capturing both him and the New York bohemia of the time. He was lucky to have met her."[6][7][8]
Biography
Helen Weaver grew up in Scarsdale, New York. Her father,
Warren Weaver, was a scientist, author, and world traveler who was Director of Natural Sciences at the
Rockefeller Foundation for twenty-seven years. Her mother, Mary Hemenway Weaver, taught Latin and ancient history. Weaver graduated magna cum laude from Oberlin College with a B.A. in English Literature in 1952. She married Oberlin classmate James Pierce in 1952; they divorced in 1955.[1] Her brother, Warren Weaver, Jr., was a political reporter on the Washington bureau of
The New York Times.[5][9]
In 1956 she met the writer Jack Kerouac, and they fell in love. Although the relationship did not last, it was immortalised in books written by both of them. Weaver often received drunken phone calls from Kerouac after they had parted. She would always tell him to phone back in the morning, but he never did. However, she made notes of what was said in every call, and collected clippings about him. Eventually she compiled everything into the book The Awakener: A Memoir of Kerouac and the Fifties.[10]
Death
Weaver died on April 13, 2021, at her home in Woodstock, New York.[1] She was 89.
^Brau, Jean Louis; Weaver, Helen; Edmands, Allan (1980). Weaver, Helen (ed.). Larousse Encyclopedia of Astrology. McGraw-Hill.
ISBN9780070072442.
OCLC6251818. Based on Brau, Jean-Louis (1977). Dictionnaire de l'astrologie (in French). Larousse.
ISBN9782030754771.
^Lehmann-Haupt, Christopher (May 22, 1967). "Holocaust Melodrama". The New York Times. So Steiner has succeeded in reconstructing Treblinka's history, in locating an appropriate style, and in demonstrating vividly how it all could have happened. Unfortunately, he has succeeded so artfully that the indigestible contents of his book go down like potato chips at a dull cocktail party