A NOTE TO OUR READERS:
"A Writer's Town" is from the June 2007 issue of Florida Living: People & Places, a special section for
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Editors' City Guide: The Keys, FL
The written word in Key West is as revered as the descendants
of Hemingway's six-toed cat.
"Papa" Hemingway and a host of other literary luminaries, including
Tennessee Williams, Elizabeth Bishop, and Shel Silverstein, once called
the island home. Robert Frost spent 15 winters in Key West too. Today,
this 2- x 4-mile paradise claims more writers per capita than any other
U.S. city.
On this tiny dot of land, literary creation flows as freely as the
ocean--and as readily as happy hour refreshments. Jimmy Buffett forever
defined the island's "wasted away again" reputation with his anthem
"Margaritaville." But more than a "frozen concoction" fuels the muse in
this idyllic spot.
"Key West has this reputation of being a party town, but there is a
whole other side to it," says Marshall Smith, owner of Key West Island
Bookstore. "It's generally a literate town. If you just look at the
number of authors who live or have lived here, it's quite impressive."
We asked some of them to riff on the island's mystique and mysterious
hold.
Tom Corcoran
An Ohio native, the novelist's introduction to Key West
came from the Navy. After he concluded his service, he returned to the
tiny town where real people are real characters and almost everyone
prefers bikes over cars.
"There was a year in the 1970s that I didn't own a car," Tom recalls.
His live-for-the-moment lifestyle included riding a bike around the
island, selling tacos. Tennessee Williams, a customer, nicknamed him
Taco Tom. Later, after Tom developed an eye and career as a
photographer, he was hired to photograph Williams in the playwright's
Key West studio.
Tom first met Jimmy Buffett while bartending at the island's Chart
Room Bar. The friendship stuck. Tom shot seven of the singer's album
covers and cowrote "Fins" and "Cuban Crime of Passion." He recently
completed a book about his friend, Jimmy Buffett--The Key West Years (Buy this book on Amazon.com.)
When he began writing fiction, the novelist aimed to make the island
one of his characters. "I wanted to bring the Key West that I know and
revere onto the pages," he explains.
Although Tom lives in Lakeland now, he often visits Key West, soaking
up the island's milieu.
Rosalind Brackenbury
"When I fly in and see this little dot and think
about all that's going on here--it seems like such an unlikely place for
so much to be happening," says Rosalind of Key West. "All kinds of
people want to live here because it is a very generous writing
community, spectacularly uncompetitive," says Rosalind, a British native
and author of 11 novels and poetry and short story collections.