Stonehill Symposium Features Award-Winning Author
By Greg
Pasciuto
Stonehill News Blog Staff
EASTON—Biographer T.J. Stiles was a
featured guest on Saturday, September 21, at Stonehill College’s Oakes Ames
Symposium.
“I’m
interested in the rise of the contemporary world,” he said during a break from the forum.
Born
near the town of Foley, Minnesota, Stiles graduated with a bachelor’s degree in
history from Carleton College in 1986. Three years later, he completed graduate
studies in European history at Columbia University. Although he ultimately
discarded his original plan to enter academia, he quickly found a job at Oxford
University Press in New York City, editing history anthologies and writing
descriptions for published books.
Stiles
attributes this success to a friendship he made with an executive at Oxford.
"It
was a case of proximity,” he said. “Being in New York allowed the happy
accident of getting a job in publishing to happen.”
He
worked with the company until 1995, when he got a job at Ballantine Books, owned by Random House. Four years later, he left to pursue writing
full-time.
Life
as an author, Stiles admitted, is no easy task. However, he added that this was
not necessarily due to a shortage of ideas to write about.
“The
struggles are overwhelmingly financial,” he said. “It’s difficult to make a
living solely as an author.”
Rising
authors in the historical field must go through a process of applying for
grants or fellowships in order to publish their work. Many also become public
speakers to support themselves.
Today,
Stiles has authored three biographies. His research interests center on
nineteenth-century American history. He received the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for
biography for his portrayal of railroad magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt. In 2016, he won the Pulitzer Prize for history for his most recent book, Custer’s Trials: A Life on the Frontier of a
New America.
Stiles’
approach to writing biographies is rooted in his desire to uncover truth about the world. Inevitably, this means giving a voice to the historically voiceless.
“Power
and wealth in the past were distributed very narrowly,” he said. “The way we go
about biographies, when we look at a powerful individual, we have to look at
who else was in the room.”
In
the case of Custer, Stiles discovered that one such person was Eliza Brown, an
African American woman who worked as a cook for Custer and his wife. Exploring
her relationship with the Custers led Stiles down new paths of inquiry.
“Focusing
on [Eliza Brown] allowed me to explore questions of race, the role of women in society,
and how women related to each other across the color line,” he explained.
Stiles
spoke for the final hour of the Oakes Ames Symposium. He placed Ames’ final
years in the greater context, demonstrating the changing nature of history in
the late nineteenth century. While not an expert on Ames himself, he was drawn
to the symposium by the politician’s role in business history and how his
contemporaries responded to economic developments.
“I
want to look at corporations at a time when people were not taking them for
granted,” he said. “A time when they were arguing over their nature.”
Summarizing
why the study of history appealed to him so much, Stiles was succinct.
“I
want to understand the mental architecture of our universe,” he said.
It was interesting reading about the complex process it takes to become an author
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ReplyDeleteIt would be interesting to know what T.J. Stiles thinks about the role on nineteenth-century America in our current world.
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ReplyDeleteStiles seems like a very interesting person.
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ReplyDeletewow defintiely could not be an author - Shane
ReplyDelete