About the Library
Henry Miller in Big Sur
Emil White, Library
Founder
Mission Statement
The Library Today
The Library Board of Directors
Events And Ongoing Programs
Exhibits
Support the Library.
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About the Henry Miller Library
The Henry Miller Library is located in Big Sur, California, USA. Three hours drive south from San Francisco. From LA, going north, the total drive time is about 6 1/2 hours.
Stay in touch - sign up to our e-mail list!
Opening hours:
Every day 11 AM - 6 PM Closed Tuesdays.
Phone/Fax 831-667-2574, e-mail
During these hours we offer free Coffee, Tea and Internet Access to all guests.
Directions:
When you're traveling up or down Highway 1 through Big Sur, stop by the Library. You will find us a quarter mile south of Nepenthe Restaurant, (a quarter mile north of Deetjen's, Big Sur Inn) in a redwood grove on the mountain side of the road. It is easy just drive, enjoy the incredible vistas, you will not miss us...
So, what is the Library?
Perhaps we can start by saying what it is not.
It is not a Library where you can borrow books, it is not a memorial with dusty relics, it is not a fully stocked bookstore, it is not a trinket store where youll find a large selection of glossy photographs of the coast, t-shirts, mugs and baseball caps. It is not Henry Millers old home (that was four miles down the road on Partington Ridge), it is not originally built to be a public place,
So if its none of those things, what is it?
Well, we can say it is a memorial dedicated to the American artist and writer Henry Miller who lived and worked in Big Sur between 1944 and 1962, and we can say it is Emil Whites old home - Emil founded the Library in 1981, a year after Miller died but, then
Henry Miller said he didnt approve of memorials. Memorials, he said, defeated the purpose of a mans life. Only by living your own life to the full can you honour the memory of someone.
So, is this place a memorial trying not to be a memorial? Maybe. The best way to find out is to come here, browse, look at whats on the walls, listen to the music, have a cup of coffee or tea, sit down by the fire, read for a while, do nothing
Beware, some people find it uncomfortable not to have a clear label and end up turning around almost immediately, others fall in love and leave after composing a poem for our guest book
It was here in Big Sur I first learned to say Amen! H. Miller
Miller lived a long life, he was married five times, had three children, was nominated for the Nobel prize in literature, wrote one of the most controversial and important books of the 20th century, Tropic of Cancer, painted water colours for fun, lived in Paris during the 1930-ies, had many of his books banned because he wrote about sex. (the books were made legal in the 1960-ies). Miller wrote a wonderful book in the 1950-ies titled Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch, we have that and many others inside.
The Henry Miller Library is a non-profit 501 ( c ) 3 organization, you can support us by buying a book, making a donation or, better yet, becoming a member and get your own membership card…
History and Purpose
The Henry Miller Library (also known as the "Henry Miller Memorial Library, Founded by Emil White") was created by Emil White, a longtime friend of Miller. Located in Big Sur, 35 miles south of Carmel-by-the-Sea on Highway One, the Library occupies White's former home.
White moved to Big Sur in 1944 to serve as caretaker and personal secretary to Henry Miller. The two had met in Chicago in 1942. In the 1960's White bought the property, a lush meadow surrounded by towering redwoods, on which the Library now stands. The main building was built in 1966 on the site of the Graves Canyon landfill created during the construction of Highway One in the 1930's. The caretaker's cottage adjacent to the main house was added shortly thereafter. Other changes have been made piecemeal since 1981.
After Miller died in 1980, Emil decided to maintain his property as a memorial to his friend and as a gallery where local artists could show their work. In 1981, with the assistance of the Big Sur Land Trust (BSLT), he converted his home into the Library. Emil spent the rest of his life as director of the new institution, which evolved into a local center for the arts.
At his death in 1989, White bequeathed the "HENRY MILLER MEMORIAL LIBRARY, FOUNDED BY EMIL WHITE," to the BSLT. "With this bequest," White wrote in his Last Will and Testament, "I am encouraging support and maintenance of said Library, and to promote and enhance the scholarly research and worldwide enjoyment of Henry Miller's literary and artistic works."
The mission of the Big Sur Land Trust is to focus on preserving Big Sur as an invaluable natural resource. The mission of the Henry Miller Library is to promote the literary and artistic works of Henry Miller, and to serve as a cultural and educational resource for residents of and visitors to Big Sur.
In 1997, with the growing awareness that these two mission statements were quite different from one another the Library staff, with the blessings of the BSLT, began the process of becoming an independent 501(c)3 organization. That process is completed.
Henry Miller in Big Sur
Henry Miller (1891-1980) is, in the words of one of his biographers, "one of the most famous-and infamous-writers of the twentieth century." During the eighteen years he spent living in Big Sur, he turned out some of his finest work, including The Rosy Crucifixion, a three-volume epic about his life with his second wife, June; and Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch, the story of his life in the region.
Miller fell in love with the rugged, isolated region on his first visit in 1944, and decided to move there almost immediately. Upon his arrival in Big Sur, Miller wrote, "Here I will find peace. Here I shall find the strength to do the work I was made to do." He also became part of a literary and artistic community that included Emil White, Jaime de Angulo, Lillian Bos Ross and her husband Harrydick, Ephraim Doner, and others.
When he first moved to Big Sur, Miller was struggling to make ends meet. Within four years of his arrival, royalties from overseas enabled him to live comfortably in Big Sur, even providing him with the resources to purchase a house on Partington Ridge. Here, with his third wife, Lepska, he raised his two children, Valentine and Tony.
Living in Big Sur obviously had a profound effect on Miller, inspiring him to write: "Peace and solitude! I have had a taste of it, even here in America." The Big Sur landscape gave him "such a feeling of contentment, such a feeling of gratitude was mine that instinctively my hand went up in benediction. Blessings! Blessings on you, one and all! I blessed the trees, the birds, the dogs, the cats, I blessed the flowers, the pomegranates, the thorny cactus, I blessed men and women everywhere, no matter on what side of the fence they happened to be."
Miller lived in Big Sur until 1962, when he moved to Pacific Palisades, where he resided until his death in 1980.
Emil White, Library Founder
Emil White was one of Henry Miller's closest friends and confidants. Miller, in fact, dedicated Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch to White, describing him as "One of the few friends who has never failed me." While he is known primarily for his association with Miller, White was one of Big Sur's most colorful characters and a remarkable person in his own right.
Born in Austria in 1901, White journeyed to Budapest during World War I, where he was arrested as a revolutionary. Just 15 at the time, he was condemned to death but amazingly escaped. Two years after his brush with a firing squad, White immigrated to the United States.
There, in 1942, he met Miller in Chicago outside a bookstore where White worked. Though Miller's work was virtually unknown in the U.S., White was already a great fan of the struggling writer. The two men became fast friends, and when Miller moved to Big Sur two years later, he asked White to join him as a caretaker and personal secretary, eventually paying him $5 a week to handle his correspondence.
In Big Sur, White started to paint. "Painting satisfied my need for creativity," he said. "It gave me a feeling of great accomplishment." White's charming oils and watercolors, distinctively primitive in style, remain today among the most popular images of the Big Sur coast.
To support himself in Big Sur, White published tour guides. These sold well and helped him achieve the financial security that ultimately enabled him to purchase the property that is now the Henry Miller Library. After establishing the Library, White spent his remaining years as director of the new institution, which evolved into a local center of the arts.
While Miller chose to spend his final years in Los Angeles, White remained in Big Sur until his death in 1989. In an interview he gave shortly before his death, White was asked whether he had any regrets. He responded, "I only wished I had moved to Big Sur sooner."
Purpose
Mission Statement
The Henry Miller Library is a public benefit, non-profit organization championing the literary, artistic and cultural contributions of the late writer, artist and Big Sur resident Henry Miller. The Library also serves as a cultural resource center, functioning as a public gallery/performance/workshop space for artists, writers, musicians and students. In addition, the Library supports education in the arts and the local environment. Finally, the Library serves as a social center for the community.
The Library Today
The Henry Miller Library serves as its founder Emil White intended, by promoting the literature and art of Henry Miller. Library visitors range from the many familiar with Miller's work who are delighted to find a center honoring him, to those who are at first merely curious, then intrigued, by this important figure in American literature. The Library staff acts as docents for its guests, who come from all over the world. More and more visitors learn about the Library's existence by viewing this website.
Concerts, workshops, educational fairs, private events and art exhibits, both indoors and in the natural redwood amphitheater on the Library's grounds, happen at this unique community center. Poetry readings, lectures, memorial services and celebrations also occur regularly at the Library. The beauty of the site, a lush meadow surrounded by towering redwood trees, and the ease of access directly off Highway One, appeals to residents and visitors alike.
The Library is an informal meeting place, offering office space and computer time to various environmental and educational groups.
People and Groups the Organization Serves
The Henry Miller Library serves three main groups of visitors: local residents both from Monterey County and Big Sur [40%], California residents [30%], and foreign tourists especially from Japan, France and Germany, where Miller is more well-known than he is in the U.S. [30%].
Big Sur enjoys a worldwide artistic and literary reputation almost as great as its reputation for breathtaking natural beauty. Many visitors from all over the world are drawn to Big Sur because of Henry Miller, and the library staff directs these tourists to Miller's work, the Library's permanent collection of his art work and rare editions of his writing, as well as videos featuring the author and his literary and artistic companions. Poetry, fiction, non-fiction and artwork by contemporaries of Miller and many of the works influenced by him also grace the Library's shelves walls and grounds, including the tiles of Ephraim Doner.
The Library celebrates our local history and culture. It is available as a meeting place and computer resource center for various nonprofit community organizations serving Big Sur; it hosts concerts, lectures, poetry readings and artists' and writers' receptions; it offers workshops in the arts and hosts educational events.
Some of the community groups and events the Library supports include:
The Big Sur Home Schooling Project
Big Sur Arts Initiative
The Big Sur JazzFest
CoastWatch
The Big Sur Children's Writers Workshop
The Big Sur Annual Winter Art Show
Pfeiffer Beach Defense Fund
Friends of the Big Sur River
As part of its Henry Miller Library Arts and Education Program, the Library actively seeks funding to underwrite community art, literary, educational and environmental projects; children's educational workshops; musical events; and other appropriate workshops.
Events and Ongoing Programs
West Coast Regional Poetry Slam
Ever since summer of 1998 HML has hosted the West Coast Regional Poetry Slam, featuring poet teams from San Diego in the south to Vancouver in the north.
Poetry Readings
Open poetry readings are held at random during the Spring, Summer and Fall months, the readings are randomly attended by local poets, writers and interested guests. Some readings have been recorded for broadcast through local National Public Radio stations.
Eric Barker Poetry Prize
Working in conjunction with the English Department at Monterey Peninsula College, HML awards a poetry prize of $300 to a student selected from the creative writing classes at the College.
Big Sur Watersheds Fair
This annual summer event focuses on the vitality of the Big Sur bio region as defined by the watersheds for the entire coast. The goal is to educate the public, with special attention given to children, about the bio diversity that makes up this unique coastal area. The two-day educational fair features displays by the Big Sur Natural History Association, the Ventana Wilderness Sanctuary, the California Department of Parks and Recreation, Big Creek Reserve, the Santa Lucia Watersheds Council, the New Camaldoli Hermitage, and other groups and individuals.
The event features water samples for tasting from almost every creek in Big Sur, local jade craftspeople, locally produced and prepared foods, a storytelling circle for children, educational exhibits and games on the natural and cultural history of the bio region, pottery-making from Big Sur clay, and performances by local musicians and poets.
Big Sur Arts Initiative
A community alternative school that was developed during the El Niño storms (when highway closures shut down local schools), BSAI provides cultural, arts and science activities in a variety of formats for the children of Big Sur. Classes/workshops are taught in schools, in homes and at community centers like the Henry Miller Library. The Library hosted an Escuela del Niño art exhibit this spring.
Workshops
Annual Children's and Adult Fiction and Non Fiction Writing Workshops. Sponsored by the Library and led by veteran editor and free-lance agent Andrea Brown, these workshops are geared for writers that are receiving serious consideration by a publisher. The workshop offers small group evaluations by editors and published authors with the goal of assisting participants in the final steps in getting their work published. Now in its tenth year.
Big Sur Painting Workshop
Teacher Ronna Emmons has led "Hoop of Eight" workshops for painters of all skill levels at the Library. Many of her students have displayed and sold their work at the Library and other local venues.
Poetry Workshop
Veteran Poetry Slam performing poets will lead a weekend workshop at the Library this fall. The goal is to develop the creative word power of all individuals involved, and to put together a Big Sur poetry team for area poetry competitions.
Exhibits, Performances and Lectures
The Library offers a variety of musical performances, art exhibits, lectures, slide shows and book signings. Both local and international artists are featured. Events include:
Winter Art Exhibit
Now in its fifth year, this community exhibit offers over fifty local artists, ranging in age from 7 to 85, the opportunity to show their work during a holiday show each December.
Pacific Rim Sculptors Group Exhibit
A select group of primarily California Central Coast and San Francisco Bay Area sculptors display their large scale work under the redwoods in the HML garden during April through October.
Lecture Series
Lectures on Henry Miller and Big Sur artistic and cultural heritage by HML staff. Tour groups, Elder Hostel groups and hotel and resort guests in Big Sur have participated in this program.
Concerts
Several musical performances are held during the summer months on the HML lawn. A benefit concert by guitarist, improviser and composer Fred Frith was held this summer. The Library also hosted musical classes and performances by local drumming teacher Jayson Fann and his students.
Community Access to Computer and Internet
As a result of grants from the Cultural Council for Monterey County, the Nepenthe/Phoenix Corporation, and local businesses and Library supporters, the Library was able to purchase new computer equipment last year. Our computer system is open to all visitors for Internet access, research, and education. Prior to our development of this community resource, residents without computers and access to Internet had to travel to the Monterey-Carmel area for service.
General Community Use
The Library is also used by a local Buddhist dharma center, the Big Sur Volunteer Fire Brigade for classes in first aid, and by many people for weddings and memorials.
Henry Miller Library Board Members
Elliot Ruchowitz-Roberts, Chairman/President
Rt. 1 Box 248
Carmel, CA 93923
Born in Brooklyn, New York, Elliot received his B.A. in English from Columbia College, his M. A. in Renaissance and Medieval Literature from Cornell University, and his California Community College Teaching Credential while at U.C., Berkeley. He is a Professor Emeritus at Monterey Peninsula College, where he taught for 32 years, serving as President and Chief Negotiator for the MPC Teachers Association. A Board member of the Robinson Jeffers Tor House Association, he coordinates its annual Prize for Poetry and its reading and performance program. He serves as judge for the annual Monterey County High School Poetry Awards sponsored by the Carl Cherry for the Arts, and he edits the chapbook of award winners. Elliot has published two chapbooks of poetry, is co-author of Bowing to Receive the Mountain: Essays by Lin Jensen and Poems by Elliot Roberts, co-editor/co-translator of two works from Telugu, and co-editor of the college writing text Bridges. His poetry has appeared in various journals and anthologies, most recently Dancing on the Brink of the World: Selected Poems of Point Lobos, The Anthology of Monterey Bay Poets 2004, caesura (25th Anniversary Edition), and The Homestead Review. A long-time member of the Board of the Monterey County Chapter of the ACLU of Northern California, he is currently serving as its Chair.
William Ashley, MD, Secretary
Box 1122, Pismo Beach, CA 93448
A native of California who lives on the central coast, Bill holds a Bachelor of Arts in physics and became a Doctor of Medicine at Loma Linda University in 1975. As a dedicated bibliographer, he has offered invaluable assistance to the Henry Miller Library in its archiving process. He is the co-author of Henry Miller: A Personal Archive, (a catalogue of manuscripts, letters, photographs, memorabilia, awards, correspondence, journals, booklets, ephemera, legal documents and other miscellaneous items) and the Henry Miller Bibliography Volume II, which he published with Miller bibliographer Roger Jackson.
Jean Grace
P.O.Box 721,
Carmel, CA 93921
Active in our community for 20 years, Jean served as two-term mayor of Carmel, 1988-1992. Among other activities, she served as President of the Asilomar Corporation for State Parks from 1994-1997, and as a trustee with Robinson Jeffers Tor House Foundation for eleven years. She worked for the City of Carmel at Harrison Memorial Library. Raised as a first generation American in Hollywood, Jean raised her own family in Hawaii and now enjoys her young grandkids. She is an enthusiastic student and participant in many fields, especially where they intersect with the great outdoors.
G. Garner (Tim) Green Vice President/Treasurer
POB 79, Big Sur,
CA 93920
California native, Tim attended the University of California at Berkeley in the early 1960's. He then traveled and worked in Europe and North Africa from 1964-1966. In 1966 he joined the United States Marine Corps, serving 34 months in Vietnam, ending his military service with a rank of Sergeant. Tim completed his studies at U.C. Berkeley, focusing on physics and the classics. Since his arrival in Big Sur in 1974, Tim has actively participated in several organizations dedicated to protecting and preserving the coast. Tim is married to Laurie Celine Angus, and they live with their 14-year old daughter Mariah Marlena on Partington Ridge in Big Sur.
Christine Vitale
1585 Prescott AveMonterey,
CA, 93940
Born and raised on the East Coast, Christine has made California her home for the past 21 years. She enjoys a full time career as a child psychologist in the Monterey County area. A published songwriter, singer and musician, Christine supports the independent, rebellious nature of Henry Miller and his legacy of freedom of expression.
Tibor Hajagos
16650 Twin Lakes Ln.
Watsonville, CA 95076
Maria Tabor
131 Lorimer St.
Salinas, CA 93901
Maria is a writer and editor living in Salinas, California. Prior to coming to California, she lived in North Carolina where she taught at Appalachian State University. She edited two literary journals: the Cold Mountain Review, at Appalachian State, and The Atlantis, at UNC-Wilmington while residing in North Carolina. She now serves as editor of the Homestead Review literary journal. www.hartnell.edu /homestead_review. She is a poet and writer of short fiction. Her latest publications can be seen in the The Café Review, The Maryland Poetry Review, Pennsylvania English, Dream International Quarterly, Lullwater Review, LUNA, Cipactli, Prairie Schooner, Flytrap, MondayPoetryReport, Santa Clara Review and Haight Ashbury Literary Journal magazines. She is the founder of a poetry competition, Poetic Voices, that involves the colleges and universities in the tri-county area of Santa Cruz, Monterey and San Benito. Her recently published chapbook is entitled, Surrender Dorothy.
Peggy Goodale
PO Box 638
Big Sur, CA 93920
Board advisors:
Erica Jong
Novelist, poet, and essayisthas consistently used her craft to help provide women with a powerful and rational voice in forging a feminist consciousness. She has published 19 books, including eight novels, six volumes of poetry, and numerous articles in mainline magazines and newspapers such as the New York Times and the Sunday Times of London. In her first novel, Fear of Flying, she introduced the world to Isadora Wing, who also plays a central part in three subsequent novelsHow to Save Your Own Life, Parachutes and Kisses, and Any Woman's Blues. In her three historical novelsFanny, Shylock's Daughter, and Sappho's Leapshe demonstrates her mastery of eighteenth-century British literature, the verses of Shakespeare, and ancient Greek lyric, respectively. She has received the Bess Hokin Prize for Poetry, the United Nations Award for Excellence in Literature, and most recently the Victoria Woodhull Award for Ethical Leadership. Erica Jong also established the Erica Jong Writing Fellows Fund to support a program at Barnard that teaches talented student writers to help other students improve their writing. An alumna of Barnard College and Columbia University, in 2005, she was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Humane Letters by City University of New York.
Joe Kishton
322 Causeway Drive # 1003
Wrightsville Beach,
N.C. 28480
Joe Kishton made the film “Henry Miller is Not Dead” which has been broadcast on many PBS stations across the country. He is professor of Psycholgy at the University of North Carolina, Wilmington.
Roger Jackson
339 Brookside Drive,
Ann Arbor, MI 48105734-665-4614
Roger Jackson has been a practicing school psychologist for 30 years, having worked in both Illinois and Wisconsin, before moving to Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1990. He compiled (with William Ashley) and published Henry Miller: A Bibliography of Primary Sources and over 110 other limited edition works, most focusing on works by or about Henry Miller or Bern Porter. His wife, Robin, is an elementary principal for Ann Arbor Public Schools. They have a son, Mark, a recent graduate of the Univeristy of Kansas.
Jesse Goodman
85 Barrow Street
Apt 6J
New York, NY 10014
Born in the Bronx in 1975, began my romance with Big Sur July 2000. Advisor to the Prague Project (a non-profit organization which promotes a cultural exchange between artists in San Francisco and Prague). Frequent collobarator on projects developed out of the Allen Ginsberg Trust (to promote the life and works of Allen Ginsberg). Lives with my partner Maximiliano, a Border Terrier named Duncan, in Budapest, Hungary.
Magnus Torén
POB 25
Big Sur, CA 93920
Library Director since 1994, Magnus is largely responsible for creating a vital cultural and educational resource at the Henry Miller Library during the past eleven years. Magnus holds a skipper's license and he spent the years between 1977 and 1984 delivering yachts across all the oceans of the world. He made landfall in Big Sur and is married to Mary Lu. They have a son, Stefan, 16 years old. The family lives on Partington Ridge in Big Sur.
Bookkeeper:
Jaci Pappas
POB 429, Big Sur, CA 93920
5th Generation Californian; graduated from Mills College in 1960 w. Busuiness Admin. Degree; worked at the California legislature 8 years before being appointed 1st woman City Clerk of City of Sacramento; moved to Big Sur in 1979; have been on Boards of the Big Sur Historical Society, Coast Property Owner’s Association, Big Sur Health Center, Big Sur Volunteer Fire Brigade, Big Sur River Run; Point Sur Lighthouse docent for 6 years; currently docent at Andrew Molera Museum (Big Sur), Hospice volunteer and treasurer of the Big Sur River Run.
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Buy Henry Miller's
titles as e-books!
one has to ask oneself if Miller could not out-write Melville if it came to describing a tempest at sea.
Miller at his best wrote a prose grander than Faulkners, and wilderthe good reader is revolved in a farrago of light with words heavy as velvet, brilliant as gems, eruptions of thought cover the page. You could be in the vortex of one of Turners oceanic holocausts when
the sun shines in the very
center of the storm.
No theres nothing like
Henry Miller when he gets rolling; one has to take the English language back to
Marlowe and Shakespeare
before encountering a
wealth of imagery
equal in intensity.
Norman Mailer
Genius and Lust
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