Poet and author Diane Ackerman
was born Diane Fink in
Waukegan
,
Illinois
, on
October 7, 1948
. She has a knack for blending
science and literary art; she wrote her first book of poetry
entirely about astronomy. It was called The
Planets: A Cosmic Pastoral, and it was published in 1976,
while she was working on her doctorate at Cornell. Carl Sagan
served as a technical advisor for the book, and he was also on
her dissertation committee. Her most widely read book is
1990's A Natural History
of the Senses, which inspired a five-part Nova miniseries,
Mystery of the Senses, which she hosted. She even has a
molecule named after her: dianeackerone.
In
1970, she married novelist and poet Paul West. They shared a
playful obsession with words that was central to their
expressions of love for each other. In 2005, Paul suffered a
stroke and, as Ackerman wrote, "In the cruelest of
ironies for a man whose life revolved around words, with one
of the largest working English vocabularies on earth, he had
suffered immense damage to the key language areas of his brain
and could no longer process language in any form." His
vast vocabulary was reduced to a single syllable: mem.
Even
when he recovered the ability to speak, his brain kept
substituting wrong words for the right ones, but she
encouraged him not to fight his brain, but to just go with it,
to say what it was giving him to say. As a result, the hundred
little pet names he used to have for her before the stroke
have been replaced with non-sequiturs like "my little
spice owl," "my little bucket of hair," and
"blithe sickness of Araby." Ackerman wrote about the
stroke and Paul's journey back to language in her most recent
memoir, One Hundred
Words for Love (2011).
Diane
Ackerman wrote, "It began in mystery, and it will end in
mystery, but what a savage and beautiful country lies in
between."
-- The Writer’s Almanac
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