
The World in Time / Lapham’s Quarterly Anne Fadiman on Essays, Personal and Historical
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Mar 13, 2026 Anne Fadiman, essayist and Yale teacher known for literary journalism and Frog and Other Essays, reflects on the craft of the personal essay and its roots in Montaigne. She recounts being an ‘oakling’ under famous parents, revives Hartley Coleridge’s story, and explores the strange comforts of the South Polar Times and Antarctic life. Short, curious, and vividly anecdotal.
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How A Pregnancy Launched An Essay Career
- Anne Fadiman began writing personal essays while confined to bed during a difficult pregnancy and wrote a column for Civilization magazine.
- She composed many early essays lying on her left side with a laptop, which led her to fall in love with the form.
Writing For The Intelligent Ignoramus
- The Common Reader is an intelligent, well-educated but not specialist audience, the ideal reader for accessible essays.
- Fadiman frames essays to attract the "intelligent ignoramus" who may not know they're curious about the topic yet.
Be Vulnerable Like Montaigne
- Embrace Montaigne's model: be honest and vulnerable when writing personal essays to create freedom and intimacy.
- Fadiman uses Montaigne's epigraph to encourage students to be as 'naked' as social convention allows.







