Death before planned publication A creator may die when publication was planned during their lifetime and the material is ready for publication in its final form. For example, the composer
Jonathan Larson died the day before his musical
Rent opened
off-Broadway. When
Stieg Larsson died, he had submitted the first two of the
Millennium novel series to a publisher. A
carbon copy of
A Confederacy of Dunces by
John Kennedy Toole was found by his mother after his death in 1969. It was finally published in 1980, and won the
Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981. A posthumous collection of
Sylvia Plath's poems won the
Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1982. or
Franz Schubert's
Unfinished Symphony. In other cases, additional authors add to the surviving manuscript to produce a
completed version for publication. A prolonged period may pass between the death of the initial author and completion of the work: following
Alexandre Dumas's death in 1870, his novel
The Knight of Sainte-Hermine was completed by Claude Schopp and published in 2005.
Intentionally delayed publication Works may be published posthumously because the author did not wish to publish during their lifetime.
Dr. Seuss (Theodor Seuss Geisel) proposed a story in 1988 but "worried educators wouldn't like it". After Seuss's death, his sketches for the book were found, and with the blessing of his widow, the book was published in 1998 as
Hooray for Diffendoofer Day! The novel was finally published in 1971, a few months after Forster's death. Similarly, work may remain unpublished because of external censorship or reluctance of publishers to promote the work.
D.H. Lawrence's novel
Mr Noon was not published during his lifetime because his publisher thought its sexual content would lead to protests.
Vladimir Nabokov left instructions that drafts of
The Original of Laura should be burnt after his death, but in 2009 it was published. An author may also have intended text to remain private.
Ernest Hemingway wrote, "It is my wish that none of the letters written by me during my lifetime shall be published" but many of them were subsequently published in
Ernest Hemingway: Selected Letters, 1917–1961. ==Additional authors==