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ERMA
BOMBECK
Dayton
native Erma Louise Fiste was only thirteen years old when she wrote her first
newspaper column, which appeared in the Emerson Junior High School Owl. Erma
knew early on that she would become a writer. That dream grew as Erma attended
high school; while there, she wrote a column for the student newspaper. At
fifteen, she managed to get a job as a copygirl for the Dayton Herald newspaper. At this time she met Bill Bombeck, who was
a copyboy on the morning paper, the Dayton
Journal. Upon high school graduation, she mostly wrote obituaries for the
newly-merged Journal Herald. After a
year, with enough in her savings account, Erma attended
Ohio
University
in
Athens
. Her stepfather was in the Army overseas and her mother insisted that she
return to
Dayton
. She enrolled at the
University
of
Dayton
, where her writing was recognized and encouraged. Upon graduating from the
University
of
Dayton
with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English, Erma signed on with the Journal
Herald as a staff writer. Bill Bombeck also attended the
University
of
Dayton
. They married in 1949. Erma continued working at the paper for four years
before leaving in 1953 to start a family.
Mrs. Bombeck tended to the necessary, yet mundane, chores of homemaking and
motherhood. While she didn't plan to return to the newspaper, her need to write
led her to the Dayton Shopping News.
There her wit and "household" wisdom provided her with the fodder for
a column. In 1963, the year she sent her youngest off to school, Erma eagerly
jumped back into her former career, saying: "I do not feel fulfilled
cleaning chrome faucets with a toothbrush. It's my turn." Yet it would be
her humorous view of housework, home and family that would make her famous as
every woman's alter ego.
Knowing the tedious and often lonely plight of the homemaker firsthand, Mrs.
Bombeck decided to direct her writings this time around to the stay-at-home
mothers of Dayton. A local weekly paid her $3 for each humorous column; as its
popularity increased, she was courted by her former employer, the Journal
Herald, to continue the column there for the meager, but improved, fifteen
dollars per week. In 1965, Erma made the move. Thrilled by the column's
popularity, Journal Herald publisher, Glenn Thompson, submitted it for national
syndication to Newsday. They offered Mrs. Bombeck a short-term contract. At
first, her column "At Wit's End" appeared in thirty-eight papers
across the country. Five years later, over 500 papers had picked it up.
Erma Bombeck spent the next twenty-seven years writing first newspaper columns
and then books that touched the lives and hearts of not only American women, but
an international audience that included men and children as well. She achieved
the pinnacle of her career with 1976's The Grass Is Always Greener Over the Septic Tank, which sold over
half a million copies in hardcover and stayed on the bestseller lists for over
ten months. It was also made into a TV movie.
Erma's career thrived in print, and took her to television. Starting in 1975,
she did humorous features and interviews for ABC's Good
Morning America program, which turned out to be an eleven-year commitment.
Erma Bombeck continued writing and publishing right through a number of serious
health problems in the early 1990's, including a bout with breast cancer and
another with kidney disease. In 1996, though, she lost her battle with kidney
disease and died. Thirty-one years of syndicated columns, twelve books, eleven
years of televised appearances on Good
Morning America, and sixteen honorary doctorate degrees later, Mrs. Bombeck
earned a place in American history as the heroine of a group few others ever
care to address: homemakers.
"My type of humor is almost pure identification," said Erma. "A
housewife reads my column and says, 'But that's happened to ME! I know just what
she's talking about!'…Basically women work alone when they're at home. They
think no one is feeling what they are feeling, that no one understands their
daily frustrations. But we do; we all do."
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