|
Eugenia
Thornton Silver
Literary
Critic and
Friend of Literature
1919–1992
True
book lovers have always perceived television as a cross between
a cyclops and a vampirea one-eyed monster ready to suck the
lifeblood from all who foolishly wander within range of its evil
glare. Yet one night a week for a decade, beginning in the mid-1960s,
even the most ardent tube-haters were silenced in households all
over Greater Cleveland.
If
it was Tuesday, it had to be time for Eugenia.
Eugenia
Thornton Silver hosted the TV program that bore her namea
unique concoction that held the attention and won the devotion of
book aficionados throughout the viewing area of WVIZ, Cleveland's
public broadcasting station. Already Cleveland's best-known lobbyist
for literature, defender of drama, prophetess of poetry and champion
of the well-chosen word, Eugenia had for years shared her love of
books with readers of The Plain Dealer as a regular reviewer
and with more intimate audiences of like-minded devotees in book
discussion groups all over town. But long before Oprah or
C-SPAN's weekend book programming took to the airwaves, Eugenia
accepted an offer to use television as a platform from which to
turn the rest of us into bibliophiles, too.
Books
were her first love. She surrounded herself with them, carried them
with her constantly, turned to them for inspiration, enlightenment,
amusement and comfort. Her greatest gift was an ability to transmit
her passion to others, to point us toward a novel we may never have
heard of or a new biography she thought we should explore. On television,
alone in front of the camera, sitting erect but exuding an easy
charm, she mesmerized us with her insights, her opinions and most
of all with her enthusiasm. Her voice could descend to the baritone
or rise to the soprano as the spirit moved her, while all the while
she led her viewers toward a new appreciation of the particular
subject she was exploring at the moment.
It
was great, she said some years later when speaking of her
show. I ran barefoot through all my favorite authors.
Born
in Chicago in 1916, she grew up in Kinsman, Ohio, and intermittently
attended Lake Erie and Hiram colleges. Although she never graduated
from a university, her reading was so vast that she could more than
hold her own with professors dripping with advanced degrees. For
20 years, starting immediately after World War II, she led discussion
groups on the Great Books of the Western World in various
suburban Cleveland settings. And to talk intelligently about the
classics of Western history, philosophy and literature meant that
first she had to read them all.
Eugenia
produced hundreds of book reviews for The Plain Dealer and
for national newspaper syndicates until her retirement in 1982.
Her insights andagainher enthusiasm came through so
clearly that many of her reviews were excerpted on the dust jackets
of books she had praised. She appeared around town frequently as
a lecturer on books and literature, produced a book review segment
on WCLV-FM radio for decades and worked closely with Friends of
the Library to support Cleveland Public Library, one of the city's
most valuable but often most overlooked cultural assets. At her
death in 1992, her 4,000-volume personal collection of books was
auctioned off, with the proceeds going to the Friends.
It
was hard to be unmoved by Eugenia's unabashed love for writing.
For the well-constructed novel or finely executed turn of phrase
she was never shy in showing appreciation. Of the second-rate, the
cheap or the vulgar she was unforgiving, dismissing them with a
disdain worthy of her role as Cleveland's grande dame of belles-lettres.
She communicated her passion in the same medium she so adored: words.
And we read or listened to those words with as much pleasure as
she took in offering them.
text
by
Mark
Gottlieb
Fall
2004
|