Improbable fiction : the life of Mary Roberts Rinehart

by Jan Cohn

Paper Book, 1980

Status

Available

Call number

928 RIN

Collection

Publication

Pittsburgh : University of Pittsburgh Press, c1980.

Description

The mystery stories and other popular fiction of Mary Roberts Rinehart (1876-1958) brought her wealth and fame, but she was much more than a writer. She was a well-known American, respected and loved during a time when few women achieved national influence. Her early life was conventional enough. Trained as a nurse, she met and married a physician, with whom she had three sons. She was living the stereotypical life of a young matron in Allegheny (now part of Pittsburgh), when her husband's investments evaporated during a stock market crash. She began writing as a means to supplement the family income. Rinehart became a prolific writer. In addition to her mysteries, she wrote serious fiction, plays, poems, magazine articles, and editorials. Her regular contributions to the Saturday Evening Post were immensely popular and helped the magazine mold middle-class taste and manners. In this fascinating account of a woman ahead of her time, Cohn illuminates the tensions that pervaded Rinehart's life. Rinehart's commercial success conflicted with her domestic roles of wife and mother; she often endured periods of illness and depression but also pursued adventure, including a job as the first woman war correspondent at the Belgian front during World War I. Throughout, Cohn presents Rinehart as a woman of many complexities whose zest for life always prevailed.… (more)

Language

Physical description

xv, 293 p.; 24 cm

ISBN

0822959127 / 9780822959120

Notes/Finding Aids

Trudy Ziegler Collection
Signed by the author. Pittsburgh author (mother born in Valencia, PA)

DDC/MDS

928 RIN
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