Familiar Spirits is a memoir published in 2000 by American writer Alison Lurie.[1] In it, she recounts a friendship with a poet James Merrill and his life partner David Jackson which began in the 1950s.[2]
Merrill and Jackson were both wealthy, well-educated men, who lived an openly gay life decades before that was common.The two men spent many years gathering Ouija board messages during séances, a fact of which Lurie was made aware of early on, and about which she never lost her early skepticism. For Merrill, the poetic result was a 560-page apocalyptic epic called The Changing Light at Sandover (1982), which is in a large measure transcribed from supernatural voices. In Familiar Spirits, Lurie attempts to provide several rational and mundane explanations for Merrill and Jackson's epiphanies and revelations.
References
- ↑ "Familiar Spirits". archive.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2023-09-19.
- ↑ "Familiar Spirits: A Memoir of James Merrill and David Jackson by Alison Lurie". www.publishersweekly.com. 2001. Retrieved 2023-09-19.