John Leggett


John Ward "Jack" Leggett was an American writer who served as the third director of the Iowa Writers' Workshop from 1970 to 1987.

Biography

Leggett was born in Manhattan to Bleecker Noel Leggett, a real estate manager, and Dorothy Mahar. She died the following year during the 1918 influenza pandemic, and Leggett was raised by his grandmother. Leggett attended the Manlius School in Syracuse, but left for Bard College before graduating. He finished high school at Phillips Academy of Andover, Massachusetts, then attended Yale University. Upon his graduation with a degree in drama in 1942, he served as a United States Navy lieutenant in the Pacific Theater.
After the end of World War II, Leggett collected "a fat swatch of rejection slips" until in 1950 he was offered a job at Houghton Mifflin in Boston, where he worked for 10 years as an editor and publicity director, then for seven years as editor at Harper and Rowe in New York.
In 1967, Leggett wrote a non-fiction, which became Ross & Tom: Two American Tragedies. He joined the English department of the University of Iowa in 1969, and was named the director of the Writers' Workshop in 1970. During his tenure, writers such as Allan Gurganus, Richard Bausch, T.C. Boyle, Ethan Canin, Michael Cunningham, Gail Godwin, Denis Johnson, and Jane Smiley came to the workshop as students. Writers he attracted as faculty include Stanley Elkin, John Cheever, Ian McEwan, Raymond Carver, Jorie Graham, Frederick Exley, Gail Godwin, Barry Hannah, James Alan McPherson, John Irving, and Frank Conroy, who became his successor.
Leggett retired in 1987, moved to Napa and helped run the Napa Valley Writers’ Conference, established in 1981 by Dave Evans of Napa Valley College. Leggett died of pneumonia at Queen of the Valley Medical Center in Napa, California on January 25, 2015.

Personal

Leggett married Mary Lee Fahnestock in 1947. They had three sons, Timothy, John, and Anthony, and divorced in 1986. Leggett moved to Napa, California in 1987 and later married Edwina Bennington of San Francisco, with whom he lived until his death.

Books