Literary Legacy
Novelist and Professor Emeritus Blanche McCrary Boyd mentored generations of writers, shaping America’s literary landscape in the process.
Walk into your local bookstore and you’ll see their names on the bestsellers’ display.
To name just a few: Ann Napolitano (Hello Beautiful), David Grann (Killers of the Flower Moon), Sloane Crosley (Grief Is for People), Jessica Soffer (Tomorrow There Will Be Apricots), Hannah Tinti (The Good Thief).
These influential writers have a commonality—they belong to a literary family tree with deep roots tracing back to Blanche McCrary Boyd’s classroom on Connecticut College’s campus. Having developed their literary tradecraft with Boyd, these writers share a familiar shibboleth, a linguistic password that has led them to critically acclaimed careers.
“The accomplishments of writers who were in my classes are astounding,” says Boyd, the Roman and Tatiana Weller Professor Emeritus of English and former Writer-in-Residence at Conn. “I won’t start to list them because whenever I do, I inevitably leave some out because there are so many.”
She has “so many successful students” that Boyd, who retired in 2022, has helped shape this country’s storytelling terrain.
One of those writers is Ann Napolitano ’94, whose novel Hello Beautiful was an instant New York Times bestseller, not to mention the 100th Oprah’s Book Club pick.
“Connecticut College has produced many excellent writers, and I attribute that to Blanche and the program she built,” says Napolitano.
“She was our school, and it’s a great one.”