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Intro | American correspondent | |
Places | United States of America | |
was | Correspondent | |
Work field | Journalism | |
Gender |
| |
Birth | 1 June 1923 | |
Death | 26 December 1998 (aged 75 years) |
Biography
Hazel Elizabeth "Betty" Hester (born 1922 or 1923; died December 26, 1998) was an American correspondent of influential twentieth-century writers, including Flannery O'Connor and Iris Murdoch. Hester wrote several short stories, poems, diaries, and philosophical essays, none of which were published.
Biography
Hester was born in Rome, Georgia and attended Young Harris College. She served in the U.S. Air Force in Wiesbaden, Germany, shortly after World War II (c. 1948–53). She was dishonorably discharged for having an illicit sexual affair with a woman. After her discharge from the Air Force, she moved to Atlanta. Hester spent most of her life in a small Midtown Atlanta apartment. She worked for Atlanta-based Retail Credit Company, commuting every day by bus. She struggled with alcoholism and bouts of depression. She was also a lesbian, which she only admitted to her closest friends.
Hester is best known for her nine-year correspondence and friendship with Southern fiction writer Flannery O'Connor. From 1955 to 1964, Hester and O'Connor exchanged nearly 300 letters, some of which are published in Sally Fitzgerald's 1979 compilation of O'Connor's correspondence, The Habit of Being. Hester, a very private and reclusive woman, asked that her identity be kept secret in the published letters; thus, she appears as "A".
Hester first wrote to O'Connor in July 1955, when O'Connor was working on her second novel, The Violent Bear it Away. Eager to exchange thoughts and ideas with someone of equal intellectual caliber, O'Connor wrote back, "I would like to know who this is who understands my stories." O'Connor felt that she and Hester shared a spiritual kinship, and O'Connor would later become Hester's confirmation sponsor in the Catholic Church. Hester left the Church in 1961 and turned to agnosticism. This news was a grave disappointment for O'Connor, who had engaged Hester in theological dialogues and tried to sustain her friend's faith.
Hester gave her letters to Emory University in 1987 on the condition that they be sealed for twenty years. They were released to the public on May 12, 2007.
Hester died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound on December 26, 1998, at the age of 75.