Immagine dell'autore.

Helen Hooven Santmyer (1895–1986)

Autore di ... E Signore Del Circolo

5 opere 1,602 membri 48 recensioni 4 preferito

Sull'Autore

Helen Hooven Santmyer was born on November 25, 1895 in Xenia, Ohio. She attended both Wellesley College and Oxford University and was active in the struggle for women's rights. During her life, she has worked as a writer, an English professor, a librarian, and a dean of women. She is the author of mostra altro And Ladies of the Club (1984), which was published when she was 88 years old. Her other works include Early Promise, Late Reward; Herbs and Apples; Ohio Town; and The Fierce Dispute. Early Promise, Late Reward tells the story of a small town Midwestern girl who was educated at Wellesley and became one of the first female Rhodes Scholars. She died on February 21, 1986 and was inducted into the Ohio Women's Hall of Fame in 1996. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra meno
Fonte dell'immagine: photocredit:charlessteinbrunner

Opere di Helen Hooven Santmyer

... E Signore Del Circolo (1982) 1,297 copie
Ohio Town (1956) 104 copie
Herbs and Apples (1925) 100 copie
The Fierce Dispute (1987) 52 copie
Farewell, Summer (1988) 49 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1895-11-25
Data di morte
1986-02-21
Sesso
female
Nazionalità
USA
Luogo di nascita
Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
Luogo di morte
Xenia, Ohio, USA
Luogo di residenza
New York, New York, USA
Xenia, Ohio, USA
Istruzione
Wellesley College
University of Oxford
Attività lavorative
writer
teacher
librarian
college administrator
professor
novelist
Relazioni
Torrence, Ridgely (friend)
Organizzazioni
Wellesley College
Cedarville University
Breve biografia
Helen Hooven Santmyer was born in Cincinnati, Ohio. As a small child, she moved with her family to Xenia for her father's business. She began to write as a child, keeping a diary from age 10, and her ambition was to become a professional writer.
She entered Wellesley College in 1914 and graduated four years later with a B.A. in English literature and composition, publishing several poems as an undergraduate. During this time, she was active in the struggle for women's rights. In 1919, she moved to New York City and worked for Charles Scribner’s Sons as an editorial secretary at Scribner’s Magazine. She returned to Xenia in 1921 to care for her ailing mother, and worked as an assistant professor in the English Department at Wellesley. Three years later, she went on to graduate studies at Oxford University, and published her first novel, Herbs and Apples, in 1925. Helen was awarded a B.Litt degree with a thesis on the 18th century British writer Clara Reeve, and returned to Ohio. In 1928, she joined the Xenia Woman's Club. She published her second novel, The Fierce Dispute, in 1929. In 1936, she took the position of Dean of Women at Cedarville College and during her 17 years there, also became head of the English Department. She resigned in 1953 and went to work as a reference librarian for the Dayton and Montgomery County Public Library. In 1960, she retired in order to devote herself full-time to writing. Ohio Town, her 1962 history and memoir of Xenia, won the Florence Roberts Head Award for excellence in Literature. At age 69, she began writing the 1,300 page novel ...And the Ladies of the Club, which was eventually published by Ohio State University Press in 1982. At first, only a few hundred copies of the book were sold, mostly to Ohio libraries. It was by chance that the novel was read by some people in the literary world who saw its potential for a larger audience. This led to the book being republished by G.P. Putnam's Sons and becoming a main selection of the Book of the Month Club. It also became a New York Times bestseller, and led the list for 37 consecutive weeks. The book sold more than 162,000 hardcover copies and an additional million copies in paperback, and made Helen a national celebrity. Her final novel, Farewell Summer, was published posthumously in 1988.

Utenti

Recensioni

Starting in the 1860s and going through the 1930s, this book takes place in a small Ohio town and covers the lives of the ladies in a literary club. By the end of this book I had the most complete sense of the passage of time, the bittersweetness of it all.
 
Segnalato
blueskygreentrees | 41 altre recensioni | Jul 30, 2023 |
Reminds one of Jane Austen in its comedy of manners style. Perfect picture of post-Civil War generations in the life of a small Ohio town and the changes of lifestyle and class divisions that ensue. I was sucked slowly into the lives of the two main families and the "ladies of the club". Worthwhile read.
 
Segnalato
mattorsara | 41 altre recensioni | Aug 11, 2022 |
Here's what I read after reading in 1986: "Golly, what's to say? A detailed living of a life. The life occurred in middle, post-Civit War America, but that's a minor detail. A story of living, loving, dying. Told by someone who's been there (an 80-odd year-old woman)."

And here's interesting information from wikipedia (response to Lewis' Main Street and best seller years after written):

"From 1922 to 1930, Santmyer wrote three novels. The first two were published to little notice and the third was unpublished. She disliked Sinclair Lewis's negative portrayal of small town America in his novel, Main Street, and conceived of Ladies as an antidote.[1] However, since she worked full-time, she was unable to write very much before her retirement in 1959.

A collection of her nostalgic reminiscences of Xenia, Ohio was published as Ohio Town by Ohio State University Press in 1962. The director of the Press, Weldon Kefauver, encouraged her to write more. In 1976 she submitted eleven boxes containing bookkeeping ledgers, her manuscript of Ladies in longhand. Kefauver accepted the novel, but wanted it trimmed. By then, Santmyer was spending much of her time in a nursing home and she dictated changes to her friend Mildred Sandoe. The Press published the novel, printed 1500 copies and sold a few hundred, priced at $35, mostly to libraries. In 1983, Santmyer was forced for health reasons to move permanently into a nursing home.[1]

Ladies was awarded the 1983 Ohioana Book Award in the category of fiction, but otherwise gained little attention at the time.

Success
One local library patron, in returning the book, told the librarian that it was the greatest novel she had ever read. Another patron, Grace Sindell, overheard this and checked the book out herself. After reading it, she agreed with the assessment and called her son Gerald in Hollywood. He was at first reluctant to look at the book, believing that anything that was that good would already be taken. Unable to find a copy in California, he ordered one directly from the publisher and agreed that it had great potential. He convinced his Hollywood friend Stanley Corwin of the same and the two purchased movie, TV and republication rights. They then convinced Putnam to republish the book. Before republication, the Book-of-the-Month club chose Ladies as their main selection. Suddenly, Santmyer and her novel were a media sensation, including front-page coverage in the New York Times.

The paperback edition, published by Berkley in 1985, sold more than 2 million copies between June and September, making it the best-selling paperback in history at the time."
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
MGADMJK | 41 altre recensioni | Jan 8, 2022 |
"...And Ladies of the Club" is one of my favorite books. Yes, it is long; my current edition has 1176 pages. (I wore out the first paperback I had.) But it does what historical fiction is supposed to do, I think, which is to help you feel what it was like to live in the past. Santmyer writes about the years between the end of the Civil War and the early years of the Depression. She manages to cover small town (midwestern) manners and mores, fashion, politics, child rearing, parties, funeral practices, medicine, education, prejudices, and just about anything else you can think of, all the while telling the story of the various interconnected families who live in her fictional Waynesboro, Ohio.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
riemerreads | 41 altre recensioni | Jul 10, 2021 |

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Statistiche

Opere
5
Utenti
1,602
Popolarità
#16,094
Voto
4.0
Recensioni
48
ISBN
33
Lingue
2
Preferito da
4

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