James Salter (1925–2015) was a master of the short story; an exquisite novelist and memoirist; an accomplished screenwriter, essayist, and journalist; the recipient of numerous awards, including a Donald Windham–Sandy M. Campbell Literature Prize; and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He was a fighter pilot in the Korean War, and his first novel, The Hunters, is based on this experience. His six other novels include A Sport and a Pastime, Light Years, and All That Is (Knopf, 2013). The author of the memoir Burning the Days, Salter received the PEN/Faulkner Award for his collection Dusk and Other Stories.

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Robert Phelps (1922–1989) was born in Elyria, Ohio, and studied at Oberlin College and the University of Chicago. He is best known for having introduced the work of Colette to Americans as the editor of Earthly Paradise: An Autobiography, Drawn from Her Lifetime Writings (1966). He also edited the works of Cocteau, and in 1970 he published Professional Secrets: An Auto­biography of Jean Cocteau. Phelps’s novel, Heroes and Orators, was praised by Donald Barr for its “meticulous observation and fine literary craftsmanship.”

Memorable Days

Selected Letters

by James Salter and Robert Phelps

In late 1969 James Salter received a long, admiring fan letter about his novel A Sport and a Pastime, which had been published two years earlier. The letter was from Robert Phelps, and it prompted a friendship and a correspondence that continued for years. In any era their letters would have been remarkable for their wit, their brio, their love, and in our era of rapid communications, the letters are especially remarkable for their depth, the sense of dwelling fully in each moment so that nothing essential is lost. Salter once observed that the goal in writing is to give the reader aesthetic pleasure on each page, and in this back-and-forth between great friends, the pleasure comes in every line.

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