The eldest of seven children, Willa Cather was born to a family whose roots near Winchester, Virginia, extended back to the 1700s. In 1883, when Cather was nine years old, her family moved to Webster County, Nebraska, near the town of Red Cloud, where her grandparents, aunt, and uncle were already homesteading. Moving from northern Virginia to the unsettled prairie had a profound effect on Cather as a child and later shaped her as a writer. Growing up, she spent time exploring the countryside and listening to stories from other pioneers, who were often recent immigrants. After high school, Cather attended the University of Nebraska in Lincoln with hopes of becoming a doctor, but decided to become a writer after one of her essays was published in the newspaper. After graduating in 1895, she spent ten years in Pittsburgh teaching, writing, and establishing herself as a journalist. In 1906, she began working as an editor for the prominent
McClure’s magazine in New York, a breakthrough for her literary career. After many years of establishing connections and friendships across the literary world, the 1910s were Cather’s most fruitful period—she published her “prairie trilogy,”
O Pioneers! (1913),
The Song of the Lark (1915), and
My Ántonia (1918). In 1923 she won the Pulitzer Prize for
One of Ours, a novel of World War I. By the 1920s, Cather had established herself as a leading American novelist, turning to historical subjects with
Death Comes for the Archbishop (1928) and the bestselling
Shadows on the Rock (1931). Among other awards, she received honorary degrees from Princeton and Yale, and her views on literary Modernism influenced such contemporary writers as F. Scott Fitzgerald. Cather never married. However, she had a number of intimate female friendships throughout her life, living for almost forty years with editor Edith Lewis. Cather divided her later years between New York City and a secluded New Brunswick cottage. She died in Manhattan at the age of 73.