Those of you who are already familiar with my British & Irish Women Writers list will already understand the basic purpose and parameters of this list. If you're not familiar with that list, please have a look at the introduction to it here.
This new list is a work in progress. New sections will be posted as I complete them (a slow process so far, so please bear with me) and appropriate links will be added. My British list now contains just under 2,000 authors, while this list, as the draft currently stands, includes a bit over 500, so there will be many, many more authors to add. If you notice that an author is missing, please feel free to let me know.
ABBOTT,
JANE [LUDLOW] D[RAKE]. (10 Jul 1881 – 14 Dec 1962)
(née Drake)
1910s – 1950s
Author of more than 40
volumes of fiction, most aimed at young girls and featuring elements of
romance and adventure. The Boston
Herald said of Happy House
(1920): "There is something of Louisa May Alcott in the way Mrs. Abbott
unfolds her narrative and develops her ideals of womanhood; something
refreshing and heartening for readers surfeited with novels that are mainly
devoted to uncovering cesspools." Highacres
(1920), meanwhile, is a school story. Other titles include Keineth (1918), Barberry Gate (1925), Harriet's
Choice (1928), Bouquet Hill
(1931), Miss Jolley's Family
(1933), Low Bridge (1935), Lorrie (1941), and The Inheritors (1953).
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AKINS,
ZOË (30 Oct 1886 - 29 Oct 1958)
(married
name Rumbold)
1910s – 1950s
Pulitzer Prize-winning
playwright, screenwriter, poet and novelist. Among her most famous plays are Déclassée (1919), which starred Ethel
Barrymore, The Greeks Had a Word for It
(1930), which formed part of the basis for the later film How to Marry a Millionaire (1953), Morning Glory, which was unproduced as
a play but won Katherine Hepburn her first Oscar when it was filmed in 1933,
and The Old Maid (1935), based on
an Edith Wharton novella, which starred Judith Anderson on Broadway and Bette
Davis when it was filmed. The last earned Akins the Pulitzer Prize. She also
wrote screenplays for a number of films, including Camille (1936) with Greta Garbo and Zaza (1938) starring Claudette Colbert. She published only two
novels—Cake upon the Waters (1919),
described as a humorous crime novel featuring a widow with a knack for
trouble, and Forever Young (1941),
in which, according to Contemporary
Authors, "a woman reminisces about her first year at school in 1900
as the youngest girl in the class, and recalls how she helped save the school
from disgrace." In her personal life, Akins married once, but her
husband tragically died after only 8 months of marriage.
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ALDEN,
ISABELLA (3 Nov 1841 - 5 Aug 1930)
(née
Macdonald, aka Pansy)
1860s – 1920s
Aunt of author Grace
Livingston HILL. Author of well over 100 books spread across six
decades—mostly sentimental, Christian-themed children's books, as well as a
few works of religious non-fiction. Her most popular works included a series
featuring Ester Reid, which included Ester
Ried: Asleep and Awake (1870), Ester
Ried Yet Speaking (1883), and Ester
Ried's Namesake (1906), and her "Chautauqua Girls" series,
which begins with Four Girls at
Chautauqua (1876) and concludes with Four
Mothers at Chautauqua (1913). In her 1956 work All the Happy Endings: A Study of the Domestic Novel in America, Helen
Papashvily noted of Alden's work: "So frequently did the cliches of
grief appear—the lock of hair, the shoe, the sun's last rays on the fading
cheek, the plaintive voice asking, 'Will Papa come home?'—that some later
readers found amusement in these bits of sentimentality." As Pansy, her
childhood nickname from her father, she published periodical fiction for
children, and for more than 20 years edited a periodical of her own called,
naturally enough, Pansy.
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ALDIS,
DOROTHY (13 Mar 1896 – 4 Jul 1966)
(née Keeley)
1920s – 1950s
Best known for her
children's fiction and children's verse, Aldis also published several adult
novels. Children's fiction includes Jane's
Father (1928), Cindy (1942), Poor Susan… (1942), Miss Quinn's Secret (1949), Lucky Year (1951), Ride the Wild Waves (1957), and The Secret Place (1962). Fiction for
adults includes Murder in a Haystack
(1930), Their Own Apartment (1935),
Time at Her Heels (1937), All the Year Round (1938), and Dark Summer (1947). According to an Abe
Books search, she published at least one romantic novel in tabloid format,
1943's Pattern in Dust. She also
published a biography of Beatrix Potter for young readers.
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ALDRICH,
BESS [GENEVRA] STREETER (17 Feb 1881 – 3 Aug 1954)
(née
Streeter, aka Margaret Dean Stevens)
1910s – 1940s
Novelist and prolific
author of periodical fiction, whose work often focuses on pioneer life in her
native Nebraska. She published stories from 1911 on (with early works
appearing under her pseudonym), but her first book, Mother Mason, didn't appear until 1924. It is variously described
as a story collection and a novel, about the adventures of a cheerful
middle-aged wife and mother. Several of Aldrich's books became bestsellers,
particularly A Lantern in Her Hand
(1928) and its sequel, A White Bird
Flying (1931), which focus on the difficult frontier life of heroine
Abbie Deal. Miss Bishop (1933),
about a Midwestern schoolteacher, was filmed in 1941 as Cheers for Miss Bishop. Her other novels are The Rim of the Prairie (1925), The Cutters (1926), Spring
Came on Forever (1935), Song of
Years (1939), and The Lieutenant's
Lady (1942). She published two story collections in her lifetime, The Man Who Caught the Weather and Other
Stories (1936) and Journey Into
Christmas and Other Stories (1949), and much of her additional short
fiction appeared in two more recent collections, Collected Short Works 1907-1919 (1995) and Collected Short Works 1920-1954 (1999).
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ALDRICH,
MILDRED (16 Nov 1853 – 19 Feb 1928)
1910s
Journalist, memoirist, and
author of a single novel. A close friend of Gertrude Stein and Alice B.
Toklas while living in Paris as a foreign correspondent, Aldrich retired and
moved, in June of 1914, to a house overlooking the Marne river valley. Her
letters to friends about her experiences when World War I began just a few
months later and the First Battle of the Marne took place practically on her
doorstep were adapted into her first book, A Hilltop on the Marne (1915). This was following by three more
collections of her letters—On the Edge
of the War Zone (1917), The Peak of
the Load (1918), and When Johnny
Comes Marching Home (1919), which detailed the rest of the war and the
months following its end. Her one novel, Told
in a French Garden, August 1914 (1916), uses the technique of Boccaccio
and Chaucer, with multiple characters each telling stories. She apparently
wrote a memoir called Confessions of a
Breadwinner, which has never been published.
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ALEXANDER,
IRENE (12 Jun 1890 – 11 Nov 1973)
1930s – 1940s
Author of four novels. The
Wisconsin Library Bulletin
describes her debut, Villa Caprice
(1932): "Entertaining light romance of a young architect whose
opportunity to decorate a villa at Monte Carlo sets him on the road to
professional success and wins him the girl he loves." Her other titles
are Crooked Alley (1933), which
appears to have elements of mystery and suspense as well, Ninth Week (1935), and Revenge Can Wait (1941). On the 1920
U.S. census, she was a schoolteacher.
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ALLEE,
MARJORIE HILL (2 Jun 1890 – 30 Apr 1945)
(née Hill)
1920s – 1940s
Author of 14 volumes of
fiction for adults and children, much of it informed by her own Quakerism. A
trilogy of novels—Judith Lankester
(1930), A House of Her Own (1934),
and Off to Philadelphia!
(1936)—deal with a widow and her eight daughters in the mid-19th century U.S.
The girls and women in Allee's fiction are frequently notable for their
interest in science. The Great
Tradition (1937) features several young women living together while studying
biology at the University of Chicago, and was in part Allee's response to
college novels which focused on parties and social life. The House (1944) is a sequel that follows one of the women into
her career as a zoologist. Among her children's fiction, Susanna and Tristram (1929) deals with a teenage girl and her
younger brother working with the Underground Railroad, and its sequel, The Road to Carolina (1932), traces
the brother's trip into the South with a passionate abolitionist. Jane's Island (1931) and Ann's Surprising Summer (1933) are
about young girls exploring their scientific interests, while The Little American Girl (1938) (which
appears to be for older readers than its title might suggest) follows a
girl's experiences studying at the Quaker International Center in Paris. Runaway Linda (1939) deals with an
unwanted orphan, The Camp at Westlands
(1941) is set at a Quaker volunteer work camp, Winter's Mischief (1942) at a country boarding school, and Smoke Jumper (1945) in the Forestry
Service. Allee was married to a zoologist, undoubtedly a source of some of
the background of her fiction. [Thank you to Constance Martin, who drew my
attention to this author.]
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ALLEN,
GRACE [WESTON] (5 Nov 1905 – 11 Dec 1995)
(married
names Hogarth and Sayles, aka Amelia Gay, aka Grace Allen Hogarth, aka Allen
Weston)
1940s – 1970s
Artist, editor, children's
author, and novelist. Born and raised in the U.S., she lived much of her
adult life in the U.K. Having started as a staff artist at Oxford University
Press, she became an editor for OUP and later for Chatto & Windus,
Houghton Mifflin, Constable, Longman, and Collins. She published five
children's titles, the first two—Lucy's
League (1950), a part-school story mentioned by Sims and Clare, and John's Journey (1952), under her
Amelia Gay pseudonym. The others, published as Grace Allen Hogarth, were The Funny Guy (1955), As a May Morning (1958), and A Sister for Helen (1976). She also
published four adult novels, the first three—This to Be Love (1949), The
End of Summer (1951), and Children
of This World (1953)—as Grace Allen, the last, a mystery called Murders for Sale (1954, aka Sneeze on Sunday), written in
collaboration with Mary Alice NORTON (who often published sci-fi and fantasy
as Andre Norton), under the pseudonym Allen Weston.
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ALLIS,
MARGUERITE (6 Feb 1886 – 6 Aug 1958)
1930s – 1950s
Author of more than a
dozen historical novels, often with New England or pioneer settings. Her last
five novels—Now We Are Free (1952),
To Keep Us Free (1953), Brave Pursuit (1954), The Rising Storm (1955), and Free Soil (1958)—traces one family's
fortunes from colonial Connecticut to the Ohio frontier, through growing
conflicts over slavery, and on to Kansas just before the beginning of the
Civil War. Not Without Peril (1941)
is based on the life of Jemima Sartwell, one of the earliest settlers of
Vermont. All in Good Time (1944)
deals with a Connecticut clockmaker just after the American Revolution. The Immediate Jewel (1948) is
described as being "about the battle for artistic freedom in a Puritan
dominated world," while Law of the
Land (1948) deals with early American feminism. Her other novels are The Splendor Stays (1942), Charity Strong (1945), Water Over the Dam (1947), and The Bridge (1949). Her earliest works
were non-fiction, including Connecticut
Trilogy (1934) and Connecticut
River (1939), though English
Prelude (1936) sounds a bit harder to classify: "The English
ancestors of America seen against the social, economic and spiritual
background which was theirs before emigration, together with an account of a
pilgrimage to the home towns as they appear to-day. Not a history. Not a
biography. Not a genealogy. Not a travel book. Yet something of all four."
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AMSBARY,
MARY ANN (20 Apr 1921 – 13 Aug 1987)
(née Howard,
aka Kay Lyttleton)
1940s – 1950s
Author of at least one adult
novel under her own name, Caesar's
Angel (1952), which was reviewed at Neglected Books here. In addition, she, along
with Jean Lyttleton MCKECHNIE, apparently shared the Kay Lyttleton pseudonym,
credited with the five-book Jean Craig series for girls—Jean Craig Grows Up (1948), Jean
Craig in New York (1948), Jean
Craig Finds Romance (1948), Jean
Craig, Nurse (1949), and Jean
Craig, Graduate Nurse (1950). It's unclear at this point which author
wrote which books in the series.
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ANDERSON,
HELEN [E.] (5 Sept 1908 – 14 Mar 1992)
(married
names Winslow & Chaney)
1930s
Not to be confused with
Scottish author Helen Maud Anderson (see British Women Writers list).
Apparently the author of only one novel, the lesbian-themed Pity for Women (1937), which received
scathing reviews at the time (though the beginning of the Kirkus review might have gained more
readers for the book than the scornful critiques discouraged: "Here is a
book that makes The Well of Loneliness
and Dusty Answer look like Sunday
School missals, that out-Colettes Colette") but which has been of
interest to scholars of lesbian fiction in recent years. Lori L. Lake notes here that it seems to
be the first example of a lesbian wedding ceremony portrayed in fiction. By
all counts, however, the story doesn't end happily.
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ANGELLOTTI,
MARION POLK (12 Nov 1888 – 21 Apr 1953)
1910s – 1920s
Author of five novels as
well as additional periodical fiction. Her debut, Sir John Hawkwood (1911), is based on the adventures of the real
life 14th century soldier of the same name, while The Firefly of France (1918) is based on the life of French WWI
fighter pilot Georges Guynemer. Burgundian:
A Tale of Old France (1912) is set in the court of King Charles VI, Harlette (1913) is "a strong tale
of Duke Robert of Normandy and the beautiful peasant woman who loved him,"
and Three Black Bags (1922) is
described by a bookseller as an "international mystery novel set in
France and Germany and involving a 'beautiful and resourceful American
girl'."
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ARISS,
JEAN [MCLELLAN] (9 May 1915 – 15 Jan 2003)
(née Fitch)
1950s – 1960s
Wife of Bruce Ariss, a
noted Monterey, California artist, and author of two novels. In The Quick Years (1958), a young woman
tells the story of her difficult grandfather's life—Kirkus critiqued its "erratic stream of consciousness"
but said the main character rang true. The
Shattered Glass (1962) is about a woman recovering from her son's death
by falling in love, only to find that her new lover is an alcoholic. Ariss
and her husband were close friends of John Steinbeck, and Bruce published a
book, Inside Cannery Row (1988),
about their friendship.
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ARMER,
LAURA [MAY] ADAMS (12 Jan 1874 – 16 Mar 1963)
(née Adams)
1930s
Artist, illustrator, and
author of children's fiction and non-fiction focused on Navajo culture, which
she often illustrated or co-illustrated with husband Sidney Armer. She is
most famous for her first book, Waterless
Mountain (1931), about a Navajo boy who wants to be a medicine man, which
won the Newbery Medal and has frequently been reprinted. Later children's
titles were Dark Circle of Branches
(1933), The Traders' Children
(1937), which was somewhat autobiographical and featured characters based on
Armer and her husband, The Forest Pool
(1938), and Farthest West (1939). She
also published the non-fiction Cactus
(1934), about different species of desert plants, and Southwest (1935), described by Kirkus as "an inspirational book, which catches the hidden
meaning and underlying significance of the beauties of the country and the
philosophy of the people." In
Navajo Land (1962), published when she was in her late 80s, is a short
memoir of her early visits to American Indian sites in Arizona. Some of
Armer's artwork can be seen here.
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ARMSTRONG,
CHARLOTTE (2 May 1905 – 18 Jul 1969)
(married
name Lewi, aka Jo Valentine)
1940s – 1960s
Bestselling author of
nearly 30 acclaimed crime novels, most of them tales of suspense rather than
whodunnits. According to Contemporary
Authors, when her early novel The
Unsuspected (1946) was serialized in the Saturday Evening Post, readers were so intrigued that they began
contacting Armstrong to guess the plot or suggest twists. Other particularly
acclaimed novels include Mischief
(1950), about a deranged babysitter, A
Dram of Poison (1956), in which a varied cast of characters search for a
lost batch of poisoned olive oil before it can kill, The Witch's House, about an adolescent girl living in a fantasy
world, and The Turret Room (1965),
about a man newly released from a mental hospital who is framed by his
ex-wife and her family. The Unsuspected
was filed with Claude Rains in 1947, and Mischief
became the Marilyn Monroe film Don't
Bother to Knock (1952). Armstrong was also a screenwriter for the TV
series Alfred Hitchcock Presents.
Other novels include Lay On, MacDuff!
(1942), The Case of the Weird Sisters
(1943), The Trouble in Thor (1953,
written under her pseudonym), The
Seventeen Widows of Sans Souci (1959), Something Blue (1962), The
Gift Shop (1967), and The Balloon
Man (1968).
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ARNOW,
HARRIETTE [LOUISA] SIMPSON (7 Jul 1908 – 22 Mar 1986)
(née
Simpson, aka Harriette Simpson)
1930s – 1970s
Novelist who often focused
on the migrations of rural Southerners to cities, the difficulties
encountered there, and the changes to rural communities that resulted. Her
most famous novel, The Dollmaker (1954),
about the matriarch of a Kentucky family who follows her husband to Detroit
and then struggles to keep her family together, was a major critical and
commercial success. Joyce Carol Oates has labelled it "our most
unpretentious American masterpiece," and actress Jane Fonda produced a
TV movie version of the novel in 1984. Arnow considered the book to be the
concluding volume of a trilogy begun with her Mountain Path (1936, published as Harriette Simpson) and Hunter's Horn (1949). Her other novels
are The Weedkiller's Daughter
(1970) and The Kentucky Trace
(1974), the latter set during the American Revolution. A previously
unpublished early novel, Between the
Flowers, appeared in 1999, and her Collected
Short Stories were published in 2005. She also published well-received
non-fiction about the early settlements in Tennessee and Kentucky, in Seedtime on the Cumberland (1960) and Flowering of the Cumberland (1963). Old Burnside (1978) featured her own
recollections of her childhood in Burnside, Kentucky.
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ASHMUN,
MARGARET [ELIZA] (10 Jul 1875 – 15 Mar 1940)
1910s - 1930
Textbook writer,
biographer, children's author, novelist, and author of periodical fiction and
poetry. Best known for her Isabel Carleton series for teenage girls, which
has been compared to the work of Louisa May ALCOTT. Those books are Isabel Carleton's Year (1916), Heart of Isabel Carleton (1917), Isabel Carleton's Friends (1918), Isabel Carleton in the West (1919),
and Isabel Carleton at Home (1920).
In the 1920s, she published four novels for adults—Topless Towers: A Romance of Morningside Heights (1921), Support (1922), The Lake (1924, aka The
Lonely Lake), and Pa: The Head of
the Family (1927). The latter two in particular received critical
acclaim. Her final book was the biographical Singing Swan: An Account of Anna Seward and Her Acquaintance with Dr.
Johnson, Boswell, & Others of Their Time (1931).
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ATHERTON,
GERTRUDE [FRANKLIN] (30 Oct 1857 – 14 Jun 1948)
(née Horn,
aka Frank Lin)
1880s – 1940s
Popular and prolific
novelist sometimes compared in her time to the likes of Henry James and Edith
WHARTON. Carl Van Vechten even compared her favorably to Wharton, suggesting
"Mrs. Wharton, with some difficulty, it would appear, has learned to
write; Mrs. Atherton was born with a facility for telling stories."
Atherton's earliest novels were melodramas, but thereafter she began
exploring themes of early feminism and often set her work in California both
during and after Spanish rule. One of her bestselling novels was Black Oxen (1923), about an older
women who regains her youth following glandular therapy. It was made into a
silent film of the same name that same year. Other titles include The Doomswoman (1893), Patience Sparhawk and Her Times
(1897), American Wives and English
Husbands (1898), Senator North
(1900), The Bell in the Fog and Other
Stories (1905), a collection of tales of the supernatural, Ancestors (1907), Julia France and Her Times (1912), The Avalanche (1919), The
Jealous Gods (1928), The Foghorn
(1934), and The Horn of Life (1942).
The Valiant Runaways (1898) appears to be an
adventure story for boys.
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ATWATER,
MARY MEIGS (28 Feb 1878 – 5 Sept 1956)
(née Meigs)
1930s
Best known for her role in
reviving the craft of handweaving in the U.S., and for her publications on
that subject, Atwater also published a single mystery novel, Crime in Corn Weather (1935), which
John at Passing Tramp reviewed here.
It was recently reprinted by Coachwhip Publications.
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AUSTIN,
MARY HUNTER (9 Sept 1868 – 13 Aug 1934)
(née Hunter,
aka Gordon Stairs)
1900s – 1930s
Essayist, nature writer, playwright,
and novelist. Her reputation has grown in recent decades as she has become
known as an important early feminist. She reacted against a Midwestern
upbringing, following her family's relocation to California, by joining
artist communities and becoming acquainted with other feminist thinkers such
as Charlotte Perkins GILMAN, Emma Goldman, and Margaret Sanger. Her first
published work, at age 21, was the essay "One Hundred Miles on Horseback,"
about her first encounters with California's landscapes. The Land of Little Rain (1903) and Lost Borders (1909) walk the line between short stories and
nature writing, and The Basket Woman:
Indian Tales for Children (1904) was written for children, as was her
later The Trail Book (1918). Her
novels are Isidro (1905), Santa Lucia (1908), Outland (1910, published in the U.K.
under her pseudonym), A Woman of Genius
(1912), The Lovely Lady (1913), The Ford (1917), No. 26 Jayne Street (1920), and Starry Adventure (1931). A novella about Christ, The Green Bough, appeared in 1913, and
another novella, Cactus Thorn,
written in 1927, was only published in book form in 1988. She published
various other non-fiction on feminist, political, and religious themes. Her
memoir is Earth Horizon (1932).
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AYDELOTTE,
DORA (10 Jan 1878 – Nov 1968)
1930s – 1940s
Author of seven novels,
with settings mostly drawn from Oklahoma's pioneer history. Titles are Long Furrows (1935), Green Gravel (1937), Trumpets Calling (1938), Full Harvest (1939), Run of the Stars (1940), Across the Prairie (1941), and Measure of a Man (1942). In her time,
she garnered comparisons to Willa CATHER, and the University of Oklahoma
Libraries have noted: "Because of Dora Aydelotte and many, many more
women writers of her era, early Oklahoma women's history has been preserved
in a natural and unvarnished setting that truly represents Oklahoma history
from a woman's point of view."
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Scott, very much enjoyed your British Women authors list. Adore Barbara Pim. Wondering if you have considered B.J. Chute’s, Greenwillow for the American author listing? A very gentle and charming story. One of my favorites.
ReplyDeleteI have a book called The Ladies Leave the Castle by Astor Athen, first published by Gifford, London 1948, and later by the Thriller Book Club. Astor Athen sounds like a pseudonym and from reading it I get the impression that the writer was a woman. I turned to your list for information but the name isn´t on it. Does this mean this was not a woman writer after all?
ReplyDeleteSorry for the delay. I have looked into Athen in the past year or so, but we failed to find any information about the author. Interesting to know it seems like it's by a woman writer. Perhaps I should go ahead and add the name to my list on my next update.
ReplyDeleteGwen Bristow: Jubilee Trail is one of my favorite books. Frances Parkinson Keyes--read most of her books in the 60's and 70's!
ReplyDelete