Anne Rivers Siddons (born Sybil Anne Rivers, January 9, 1936 – September 11, 2019) was an American novelist who wrote stories set in the southern United States.
Early years
The only child[1] of Marvin and Katherine Rivers,[2] she was born in Atlanta, Georgia, was raised in Fairburn, Georgia, and attended Auburn University,[3] where she majored in illustration after initially studying architecture.[4] She was named Loveliest of the Plains[5] and was a member of the Delta Delta Delta sorority. While at Auburn she wrote a column for the student newspaper, The Auburn Plainsman, that favored integration. The university administration attempted to suppress the column (when she refused to reconsider what she wrote, the piece ran with a disclaimer),[1] and ultimately fired her, and the column garnered national attention.
Career
Following her college graduation, Siddons worked in advertising, but her desire to write led her to journalism,[1] and in 1963 she became a writer for Atlanta magazine,[4] where she eventually became a senior editor.
In 1994, Siddons signed with HarperCollins to write four books for $13 million.[5] She signed a three-book contract with Warner Books and her novel titled Off Season was released in 2008. Her novel "Burnt Mountain" made many best books of the year lists in 2011.
Reception
Stephen King, in his non-fiction review of the horror medium, Danse Macabre, listed The House Next Door as one of the finest horror novels of the 20th Century, and provides a lengthy review of the novel in its "Horror Fiction" section.
Personal life
At the age of thirty, she married Heyward Siddons, who died April 8, 2014.[6] She struggled with four years of depression in the early 1980s, essentially stopping her writing.[7] In 1991, she received an honorary degree in Doctor of Letters from Oglethorpe University.[8] She lived in Charleston, South Carolina, and spent summers in Maine. Siddons died on September 11, 2019, at the age of 83 in Charleston.[9]